Foundational to the English novel in the eighteenth century was a narrative grammar of the human structured around two ideas: sympathy and sovereignty. Linking these two were deliberations on the role of technology in determining the reach and extent of the sympathetic imagination. This essay reprises the novel’s historical links with distant suffering and technologies of mediation – the staple of debates on the sentimental novel and the rise of Abolitionism in the late eighteenth century – in the context of the emergence of a critical mass of world novels written against the backdrop of post-1989 sites of geopolitical carnage. New media technologies and multiple visual regimes have been critical in mediating these deathworlds for diverse p...
The accelerated processes of globalisation, along with time-space compression and the arrival of the...
This thesis examines the process of reading in Mary Shelley’s novel The Last Man (1826). The novel ...
In This Thing Called the World Debjani Ganguly theorizes the contemporary global novel and the socia...
Foundational to the English novel in the eighteenth century was a narrative grammar of the human str...
In 1957 Ian Watt published The Rise of the Novel. Promptly recognised as a classic of cultural histo...
After the two World Wars and the rise of totalitarian regimes, dystopian narratives have begun to sp...
The article explores E.M. Forster’s story The Machine Stops (1909) as an example of dystopian litera...
Although the exact origin of the dystopian genre is debated, literary critics agree that their subje...
This essay traces the emergence of a new contemporary novel form at the conjunction of global violen...
This essay examines three contemporary genre narratives that explore the concept of life after death...
The thesis aims to give an overview of the treatment of media in texts that have formed modern dysto...
This thesis examines the development of the novel in the eighteenth century in relation to changing ...
This dissertation attends to the complex figure of the automaton in Victorian fiction. The metaphori...
Though Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein over two hundred years ago, many of the main themes of aliena...
The monograph provides a comparative approach to the apocalyptic culture of the last two centuries’ ...
The accelerated processes of globalisation, along with time-space compression and the arrival of the...
This thesis examines the process of reading in Mary Shelley’s novel The Last Man (1826). The novel ...
In This Thing Called the World Debjani Ganguly theorizes the contemporary global novel and the socia...
Foundational to the English novel in the eighteenth century was a narrative grammar of the human str...
In 1957 Ian Watt published The Rise of the Novel. Promptly recognised as a classic of cultural histo...
After the two World Wars and the rise of totalitarian regimes, dystopian narratives have begun to sp...
The article explores E.M. Forster’s story The Machine Stops (1909) as an example of dystopian litera...
Although the exact origin of the dystopian genre is debated, literary critics agree that their subje...
This essay traces the emergence of a new contemporary novel form at the conjunction of global violen...
This essay examines three contemporary genre narratives that explore the concept of life after death...
The thesis aims to give an overview of the treatment of media in texts that have formed modern dysto...
This thesis examines the development of the novel in the eighteenth century in relation to changing ...
This dissertation attends to the complex figure of the automaton in Victorian fiction. The metaphori...
Though Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein over two hundred years ago, many of the main themes of aliena...
The monograph provides a comparative approach to the apocalyptic culture of the last two centuries’ ...
The accelerated processes of globalisation, along with time-space compression and the arrival of the...
This thesis examines the process of reading in Mary Shelley’s novel The Last Man (1826). The novel ...
In This Thing Called the World Debjani Ganguly theorizes the contemporary global novel and the socia...