This essay analyses Zoë Wicomb's novel David's Story and her latest collection of short stories, The One That Got Away, through the lense of cosmopolitanism and Jacques Derrida's concept of ‘hauntology’. Wicomb is a cosmopolitan author in a very precise sense: an author who embeds locally specific stories in a complex intertextual, historical and transnational web of cross-references. As settings, characters and objects move between Scotland and South Africa, it appears that the histories of these countries are mutually haunted by each other. Uncanny encounters with the past, and with memorials and art objects that take on a spectral quality, evoke an increasing sense of disorientation on the part of protagonists and readers alike. Assumpti...
Post-millennial writings function as a useful prism through which we can understand contemporary Eng...
How do the concepts “border,” “exile,” and “diaspora” shape individual and group identities across c...
Deposited with permission of Melbourne University PublishingIt is time to introduce the concept of t...
This article examines the diasporic implications in the fictional works of Zoë Wicomb, who was born ...
This is the first book on the fiction of Zoë Wicomb, a writer long at the forefront of the South Afr...
This essay places Zoë Wicomb's writing in the context of recent accounts of the ‘new cosmopolitanism...
This article examines the intertextual connections between Zoë Wicomb's 2008 short story, "The One T...
What are the theoretical implications of my title? How easily can we translate cultures of 'travel' ...
Discusses the novel Still Life (2020) by the Scottish/South African writer Zoë Wicomb, which portray...
In this paper I discuss, from a postcolonial perspective, Gemma Files' 2014 collection of interlocki...
Zoë Wicomb’s three fictional works – You Can’t Get Lost in Cape Town (1987), David’s Story (2000) an...
In this essay on Zoë Wicomb’s “When the Train Comes” from the collection You Can’t Get Lost in Cape ...
This dissertation is an attempt to rethink the relation between narrative and the historical categor...
The essay brings together Zoe Wicomb’s David’s Story with Walter Benjamin’s “Theses on the Philosoph...
Nudged into a new interpretive approach by a comment in her most recent novel, this essay presents a...
Post-millennial writings function as a useful prism through which we can understand contemporary Eng...
How do the concepts “border,” “exile,” and “diaspora” shape individual and group identities across c...
Deposited with permission of Melbourne University PublishingIt is time to introduce the concept of t...
This article examines the diasporic implications in the fictional works of Zoë Wicomb, who was born ...
This is the first book on the fiction of Zoë Wicomb, a writer long at the forefront of the South Afr...
This essay places Zoë Wicomb's writing in the context of recent accounts of the ‘new cosmopolitanism...
This article examines the intertextual connections between Zoë Wicomb's 2008 short story, "The One T...
What are the theoretical implications of my title? How easily can we translate cultures of 'travel' ...
Discusses the novel Still Life (2020) by the Scottish/South African writer Zoë Wicomb, which portray...
In this paper I discuss, from a postcolonial perspective, Gemma Files' 2014 collection of interlocki...
Zoë Wicomb’s three fictional works – You Can’t Get Lost in Cape Town (1987), David’s Story (2000) an...
In this essay on Zoë Wicomb’s “When the Train Comes” from the collection You Can’t Get Lost in Cape ...
This dissertation is an attempt to rethink the relation between narrative and the historical categor...
The essay brings together Zoe Wicomb’s David’s Story with Walter Benjamin’s “Theses on the Philosoph...
Nudged into a new interpretive approach by a comment in her most recent novel, this essay presents a...
Post-millennial writings function as a useful prism through which we can understand contemporary Eng...
How do the concepts “border,” “exile,” and “diaspora” shape individual and group identities across c...
Deposited with permission of Melbourne University PublishingIt is time to introduce the concept of t...