âAs we have come to expect from Isabel Hofmeyr, <i>Dockside Reading</i> is dazzlingly creative, intellectually playful, and immaculately crafted. This is a brilliant history of the ideas and textual forms that emerged from the damp crates that customs officials scoured at the waterâs edge for signs of contamination. Setting sail from South Africa, ranging across the worldâs oceans, this is a quietly revolutionary, fully aquatic literary history for our times.â
- Sunil Amrith, Dhawan Professor of History, Yale University,
âWhat happens to books when they cross borders? Isabel Hofmeyr sets her radically new history of literature not in the library but at the dock. In pages where authors and scholars are upstaged by censors, customs officers, and even dockhands, she challenges literary critics to think beyond the text as a static entity tied to a single nation or a single landmass. This is that rare book that will make it impossible to continue doing business as usualâfor literary critics, for legal scholars, and for book historians.â
- Leah Price, author of, What We Talk about When We Talk About Books: The History and Future of Reading
âHofmeyr addresses themes that acknowledge but transcend the particularities of place, revealing instead the connecting threads that bind disparate parts of the world together.â
- Dane Kennedy, International Journal of African Historical Studies
âHofmeyrâs scholarship is exemplary in its marriage of evocative detail with magisterial overview. She gives a compelling account of how customs procedure developed and changed over the course of almost a century. . . . She teaches us a new way to read.â
- Matthew P.M. Kerr, Modern Language Review
"[Hofmeyr's] work sheds important light on the interdependency between reading practices and the book as object. . . . Hofmeyr deftly interweaves her research into customs documents with environmental and postcolonial theory, animating what is usually perceived as a dull or colorless archive through semantic resignification."
- Neelam Srivastava, Journal of Postcolonial Inquiry
"In her stimulating investigation, <i>Dockside Reading</i>, Isabel Hofmeyr offers a fresh perspective on book history in the British Empire."
- Katharine Anderson, Journal of British Studies
<p>"Hofmeyr has produced a remarkable volume combining elements of both historical and 'literary'Â scholarship. It is a must read for those who study English Literature, the British Empire, the history of material culture, and international trade transactions of both human and non-human 'cargo.'â</p>
- Paul Chiudiza Banda, African Studies Review
âHofmeyrâs exploratory text provides a useful and enticing illustration of the new questions and perspectives that an amphibious approach, equally attuned to developments on land and water, can generate. If, as Rachel Carson once remarked, the edge of the sea is a strange and beautiful boundary then <i>Dockside Reading</i> provides a glimpse of how intellectually rewarding this shifting and slippery frontier can be.â
- Devika Shankar, American Historical Review