Across Continents: Writing Goans, Making Worlds: African Perspectives
Autor R. Benedito Ferrãoen Limba Engleză Paperback – 27 aug 2026
In examining the mobility and diversity of Goan experiences as represented in works by Salman Rushdie, M. G. Vassanji, Roger King, and Margaret Mascarenhas, this book calls into question limits of citizenship, nationality, and notions of belonging. Ferrão centers seemingly minor figures to exemplify the effects of colonial and postcolonial changes that connect diverse geopolities.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780472058211
ISBN-10: 0472058215
Pagini: 188
Ilustrații: 7 illustrations
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PRESS
Colecția University of Michigan Press
Seria African Perspectives
ISBN-10: 0472058215
Pagini: 188
Ilustrații: 7 illustrations
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PRESS
Colecția University of Michigan Press
Seria African Perspectives
Notă biografică
R. Benedito Ferrão is Associate Professor of English and Asian & Pacific Islander American Studies at William & Mary.
Recenzii
“Across Continents deftly and ambitiously brings together postcolonial literatures, historical analysis, and feminist critique to engage a wide-ranging archive of postcolonial subject-formation. From travelogues to novels, from art objects to cultural performance, Ferrão provides a critical colonial and postcolonial genealogy for understanding the variegated histories of the postcolony within the Luso/African framework."
"A former Portuguese colony where Portuguese is now little spoken, a tiny enclave in India that frustrates easy insertion into dominant nationalist timelines and narratives, Goa and its literary archive have often been ignored in debates on literature. Ferrão’s work astutely reframes this anomalous experience as a worldly strength enabling a central contribution to world literary debates that transcend the narrow bounds of the national, providing us with a groundbreaking work that will interest a broad and diverse audience in post- and decolonial studies and migration literature, across languages, cultures, and, indeed, continents."
“When the liberated, once-colonized nation (here India) becomes the de facto symbol of postcolonial identity, what is to be made of those subjects and regions (here Goans and Goa) whose histories and identities refuse to cohere with such hegemonic self-conception? This is the question that animates the literary readings offered here of texts that narrate the Lusopheric, transoceanic, and transcontinental displacements of a people who have historically defied being reduced to a nation. A provocation that is sure to unsettle the terrain of postcolonial studies.”
"A former Portuguese colony where Portuguese is now little spoken, a tiny enclave in India that frustrates easy insertion into dominant nationalist timelines and narratives, Goa and its literary archive have often been ignored in debates on literature. Ferrão’s work astutely reframes this anomalous experience as a worldly strength enabling a central contribution to world literary debates that transcend the narrow bounds of the national, providing us with a groundbreaking work that will interest a broad and diverse audience in post- and decolonial studies and migration literature, across languages, cultures, and, indeed, continents."
“When the liberated, once-colonized nation (here India) becomes the de facto symbol of postcolonial identity, what is to be made of those subjects and regions (here Goans and Goa) whose histories and identities refuse to cohere with such hegemonic self-conception? This is the question that animates the literary readings offered here of texts that narrate the Lusopheric, transoceanic, and transcontinental displacements of a people who have historically defied being reduced to a nation. A provocation that is sure to unsettle the terrain of postcolonial studies.”
Descriere
A dialogue between postcolonial literature and Afro-Asiatic studies through an analysis of Goan characters
Cuprins
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
1. Introduction: The Many Worlds of Goa
2. The Missing Continent: (No) Africa in the Canvas of Salman Rushdie’s Midnight’s Children
3. A Lonely Goan in Once-British East Africa: Making India by Omission in M. G. Vassanji’s The Book of Secrets
4. Neoliberalism’s Everywhere and Nowhere: The Postnational Migrant in Roger King’s A Girl from Zanzibar
5. Conclusion – The Other Black Ocean: Indo-Portuguese Slavery and Africanness Elsewhere in Margaret Mascarenhas’s Skin
References
Acknowledgments
1. Introduction: The Many Worlds of Goa
2. The Missing Continent: (No) Africa in the Canvas of Salman Rushdie’s Midnight’s Children
3. A Lonely Goan in Once-British East Africa: Making India by Omission in M. G. Vassanji’s The Book of Secrets
4. Neoliberalism’s Everywhere and Nowhere: The Postnational Migrant in Roger King’s A Girl from Zanzibar
5. Conclusion – The Other Black Ocean: Indo-Portuguese Slavery and Africanness Elsewhere in Margaret Mascarenhas’s Skin
References