This is the first book on the fiction of Zoë Wicomb, a writer long at the forefront of the South African canon and whose international stature was firmly secured with the award of an inaugural Windham Campbell prize at Yale in 2013. It brings together interdisciplinary essays from the UK, USA, South Africa, and Australia, demonstrating Wicomb’s importance as a novelist, short-story writer, and critic. The central focus of the volume is the translocal, a term that navigates the complex and shifting relations between disparate localities, respecting the situatedness of each locality within its immediate geopolitical context, while investigating the connections and contrasts that operate between them. In Wicomb’s case, her work stems from a dual allegiance to two localities, both in her fiction as in her life: South Africa’s Western Cape and the west of Scotland. In tracking the relations, contemporary and historical, between these sites, her fiction reveals a consistent interest in and interrogation of home and belonging, space and place; it also offers telling insights into questions of race and gender. The historical processes of colonization and migration that have produced translocal connections of this kind are central to postcolonial studies, to which this book makes a significant contribution. Exploring the visual and cartographical, and extending debates on the transnational and cosmopolitan that are currently taking place across disciplines, including literary studies, geography, history, politics, and anthropology, the collection covers the range of Wicomb’s work. It also features an unanthologised essay by Wicomb herself, an interview, and a suite of photographs by Sophia Klaase, whose images of Namaqualand inspired Wicomb’s most recent novel, October.
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List of FiguresPrefaceAcknowledgementsChapter 1. IntroductionDerek AttridgeChapter 2. Zoë Wicomb’s Translocal: Troubling the Politics of LocationDorothy DriverChapter 3. The Urge to Nowhere: Wicomb and CosmopolitanismAbdulrazak GurnahChapter 4. ‘No Escape from Home’: History, Affect and Art in Zoë Wicomb’s Translocal CoincidencesDerek AttridgeChapter 5. ‘Travelling Light’: Images (via Wicomb) from the Gifberge to GlasgowKai Easton Chapter 6. Zoë Wicomb’s Telescopic Visions: You Can’t Get Lost in Cape Town & OctoberCóilín ParsonsChapter 7. Roamin’ the Gloamin’: Scottish Ghosts of Griqualand in Zoë Wicomb’s David’s StoryShaun IrlamChapter 8. History, Critical Cosmopolitanism and Translocal Mobility in the Fiction of Zoë WicombPamela ScullyChapter 9. Lost and Found: Zoë Wicomb, Thomas Pringle and the Translocal inScottish–South African Literary RelationsDavid AttwellChapter 10. Glasgow’s Empire Exhibition and the Interspatial Imagination in ‘There’s the Bird That Never Flew’John Miller and Mariangela PalladinoChapter 11. Scenes from NamaqualandSophia KlaaseIntroduction by Rick RohdeChapter 12. Unsettling Homes and the Provincial-cosmopolitan Point of View in Zoë Wicomb’s OctoberMeg SamuelsonChapter 13. My Name is HannaH: Arthur Nortje Memorial LectureZoë WicombChapter 14. Zoë Wicomb in Conversation with Derek AttridgeNotes on ContributorsIndex
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780367503475
Publisert
2020-02-25
Utgiver
Vendor
Routledge
Vekt
453 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
230

Biographical note

Kai Easton is Senior Lecturer in English at SOAS University of London, UK.

Derek Attridge is Professor Emeritus in the Department of English and Related Literature at the University of York, UK.