06425nam 2200493 450 991079861040332120230808195440.090-04-32876-910.1163/9789004328761(CKB)3710000000865087(MiAaPQ)EBC4773538(OCoLC)961212473(nllekb)BRILL9789004328761(EXLCZ)99371000000086508720170110h20162016 uy 0engurcnu||||||||rdacontentrdamediardacarrierRe-inventing the postcolonial (in the) Metropolis /edited by Cecile Sandten, Annika BauerLeiden, Netherlands ;Boston, [Massachusetts] :Brill Rodopi,2016.©20161 online resource (462 pages) illustrations (some color), photographs, tablesCross/Cultures,1385-2981 ;Volume 188ASNEL Papers ;Volume 2090-04-32285-X Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and index.Preliminary Material /Cecile Sandten and Annika Bauer -- The Economics of Urban Development for the Postcolonial Poor /Melissa Kennedy -- Post-Coloniality, Poetry, and Debt /Enda Duffy -- Equivocal Identity-Politics in Multi-Cultural London /David Tavares and Marc Brosseau -- Tracing the Rural in the Urban: Re-Reading Phaswane Mpe’s Welcome to Our Hillbrow through Brooding Clouds /Annika Mcpherson -- The Representation of Place in Three Post-Apartheid South African Novels /Michael Wessels -- ‘Welcome to Johannesburg’: Melancholia and Fragmentation in Kgebetli Moele’s Room 207 /Danyela Demir -- Angels in South Africa? Queer Urbanity in K. Sello Duiker’s The Quiet Violence of Dreams and Tony Kushner’s Angels in America /Verena Jain–warden -- The Thrust of the City: Penis Fixation in Jude Dibia’s Blackbird /Chri Sdunton -- The City, Hyperculturality, and Human Rights in Contemporary African Women’s Writing /Chielozona Eze -- Utopian Sights: Re-Inventing the Asian Metropolis /Bill Ashcroft -- A City on the Move: Routing Urban Spaces – Literary and Cinematic Representations of Mumbai’s Lifeline, the ‘Local’ Trains /Mala Pandurang -- The Experience of Urban Space in the Poetry of Arun Kolatkar /Rajeev S. Patke -- The Metropolis in the Province: Interrogating the New Postcolonial Literature in India /R. Raj Rao -- ‘No One Is India’: Literary Renderings of the (Postcolonial) Metropolis in Salman Rushdie and Indra Sinha /Roman Bartosch -- The Glocal Metropolis: Tokyo Cancelled, The White Tiger, and Spatial Politics /Pia Florence Masurczak -- Cosmopolitan Poetry from Asian Cities /Agnes S.L. Lam -- City of Words: Haunting Legacies in Gail Jones’s Five Bells /Sue Kossew -- Michelle de Kretser’s The Lost Dog: History and Identity in the Metropolis of Melbourne /Marijke Denger -- Indigenous Urbanities: Representations of Cities in Native Canadian, Aboriginal Australian, and Maori Literature /Frank Schulze–Engler -- From Postcoloniality to Global Media Culture: Multimedial Reflections on Metropolitan Space /Rolf J. Goebel -- Between Ghetto and Utopia: London as a Postcolonial Metropolis in Recent British Music Videos /Oliver Lindner -- The Sounding City: Soundscapes and Urban Modernity in Amit Chaudhuri’s Fiction /Christin Hoene -- Pidgin Goes Public: Urban Institutional Space in Cameroon /Eric A. Anchimbe -- Emancipation from and Re-Invention of the Linguistic Metropolis in a Postcolonial Speech Community /Michael Westphal -- Notes on Contributors and Editors /Cecile Sandten and Annika Bauer -- Index /Cecile Sandten and Annika Bauer.The notion of the postcolonial metropolis has gained prominence in the last two decades both within and beyond postcolonial studies. Disciplines such as sociology and urban studies, however, have tended to focus on the economic inequalities, class disparities, and other structural and formative aspects of the postcolonial metropolises that are specific to Western conceptions of the city at large. It is only recently that the depiction of postcolonial metropolises has been addressed in the writings of Suketu Mehta, Chris Abani, Amit Chaudhuri, Salman Rushdie, Aravind Adiga, Helon Habila, Sefi Atta, and Zakes Mda, among others. Most of these works probe the urban specifics and physical and cultural topographies of postcolonial cities while highlighting their agential capacity to defy, appropriate, and abrogate the superimposition of theories of Western modernity and urbanism. These ASNEL Papers are all concerned with the idea of the postcolonial (in the) metropolis from various disciplinary viewpoints, as drawn from a great range of cityscapes (spread out over five continents). The essays explore, on the one hand, ideas of spatial subdivision and inequality, political repression, social discrimination, economic exploitation, and cultural alienation, and, on the other, the possibility of transforming, reinventing and reconfigurating the ‘postcolonial condition’ in and through literary texts and visual narratives. In this context, the volume covers a broad spectrum of theoretical and thematic approaches to postcolonial and metropolitan topographies and their depictions in writings from Australia and New Zealand, South Africa, South Asia, and greater Asia, as well as the UK, addressing issues such as modernity and market economies but also caste, class, and social and linguistic aspects. At the same time, they reflect on the postcolonial metropolis and postcolonialism in the metropolis by concentrating on an urban imaginary which turns on notions of spatial subdivision and inequality, political repression, social discrimination, economic exploitation, and cultural alienation – as the continuing ‘postcolonial’ condition.Cross/cultures ;Volume 188.ASNEL papers ;Volume 20.PostcolonialismPostcolonialism.325.3Sandten CecileBauer AnnikaMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910798610403321Re-inventing the postcolonial (in the) Metropolis3800427UNINA