This article pits two conceptions of modernity—that of the Marxist humanist Marshall Berman and the ANT (Actor-Network Theory) sociologist Bruno Latour—against each other, exploring the implications of each for postcolonial and world literary criticism. The article begins by explaining “modernity” in the terms of both theorists, focusing on the “split” between subject and object, text and world. It then identifies a wider Latourian turn in postcolonial and world literary studies that has emerged in response to the prescriptively structural approaches of groups such as the WReC. In response, the article offers in turn a Latourian reading and then a structural critique of the Colombian novelist Juan Gabriel Vásquez’s fifth novel, The Sound of...
This article responds to the debate in the field of literary theory around the nature o...
As a grand narrative of progress, the utopian project of modernity is primarily concerned with notio...
The article examines two ‘postmodern’ critiques of modernity: a general history which argues that it...
The study of literary modernism is in the ascendant in the academy. From alternate modernisms, to ne...
This article considers the challenge posed by Gayatri Spivak to rethink world literature along postc...
Through a close reading of Joe Sacco’s Paying the Land(2020), a graphic novel about the struggle of ...
Post- Modernism was not the invention of literary critics, but literature can certainly claim to be ...
This article examines the impact of modernism on philosophy and literature. It proposes two defining...
The accelerated processes of globalisation, along with time-space compression and the arrival of the...
Over the last twenty years the idea of an ever more integrated ‘global village’ has become received ...
Bauman, Elias and Latour on Modernity and its Alternatives: Three Contemporary Sociological Theoris...
This essay identifies in the materialist strand of world literature theory, especially Pascale Casan...
Review of Peter Kalliney. Modernism in a Global Context. London: Bloomsbury, 2016. 190 pp
This article posits Hong Kong as a test case for several theoretical perspectives currently develope...
Fredric Jameson, The Modernist Papers. New York: Verso, 2007. 160 pp. ISBN 9781844670963
This article responds to the debate in the field of literary theory around the nature o...
As a grand narrative of progress, the utopian project of modernity is primarily concerned with notio...
The article examines two ‘postmodern’ critiques of modernity: a general history which argues that it...
The study of literary modernism is in the ascendant in the academy. From alternate modernisms, to ne...
This article considers the challenge posed by Gayatri Spivak to rethink world literature along postc...
Through a close reading of Joe Sacco’s Paying the Land(2020), a graphic novel about the struggle of ...
Post- Modernism was not the invention of literary critics, but literature can certainly claim to be ...
This article examines the impact of modernism on philosophy and literature. It proposes two defining...
The accelerated processes of globalisation, along with time-space compression and the arrival of the...
Over the last twenty years the idea of an ever more integrated ‘global village’ has become received ...
Bauman, Elias and Latour on Modernity and its Alternatives: Three Contemporary Sociological Theoris...
This essay identifies in the materialist strand of world literature theory, especially Pascale Casan...
Review of Peter Kalliney. Modernism in a Global Context. London: Bloomsbury, 2016. 190 pp
This article posits Hong Kong as a test case for several theoretical perspectives currently develope...
Fredric Jameson, The Modernist Papers. New York: Verso, 2007. 160 pp. ISBN 9781844670963
This article responds to the debate in the field of literary theory around the nature o...
As a grand narrative of progress, the utopian project of modernity is primarily concerned with notio...
The article examines two ‘postmodern’ critiques of modernity: a general history which argues that it...