The Postcolonial Bildungsroman: Narratives of Youth, Representational Politics, and Aesthetic Reinventions
Editat de Arnab Dutta Roy, Paul Ugoren Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 sep 2025
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781772127706
ISBN-10: 1772127701
Pagini: 568
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.6 kg
Editura: University of Alberta Press
Colecția University of Alberta Press
Locul publicării:Edmonton, Canada
ISBN-10: 1772127701
Pagini: 568
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.6 kg
Editura: University of Alberta Press
Colecția University of Alberta Press
Locul publicării:Edmonton, Canada
Cuprins
- Acknowledgements
- I.
- The Postcolonial Bildungsroman
- Introduction: The Postcolonial Bildungsroman
- Arnab Dutta Roy (Florida Gulf Coast University) and Paul Ugor (University of Waterloo)
- II.
- Historicizing the Postcolonial Bildungsroman
- Chapter 1— Reading the Classical Bildungsroman as a Colonial Genre
- José-Santiago Fernández-Vázquez (University of Alcalá)
- Chapter 2—“Couldn’t you be broken and still bring change?”: Nnedi Okorafor’s Binti Trilogy
- Ericka Hoagland (Stephen F. Austin State University)
- III.
- Coloniality, Postcoloniality, Cosmopolitanism and the Bildungsroman
- Chapter 3— Contextualizing the Postcolonial Bildungsroman
- Feroza Jussawalla (University of New Mexico)
- Chapter 4—“Sono Un Crocevia:” Igiaba Scego’s La mia casa è dove sono as Diaspora Bildungsroman
- Simone Puleo (Central Connecticut State University)
- Chapter 5—The Cosmopolitan Bildungsroman
- Antonette Talaue-Arogo (De La Salle University Manila)
- IV.
- Childhood, Nation, and Narration
- Chapter 6— History as Murmur: Derek Walcott’s Another Life as Postcolonial Bildungsroman Andrew David King (UC Berkeley)
- Chapter 7— Upendra Nath Ashk’s Falling Walls: Bildungsroman of The Lost Youth of Independent India
- Aruna Krishnamurthy (Fitchburg State University)
- Chapter 8— Recovering Those Who “Trod”: Disrupting the Bildungsroman in Shūsaku Endō’s Silence
- Maria Su Wang and Bethany Williamson (Biola University)
- Chapter 9— The Truth and Reconciliation Commission, the Bildungsroman, and the “New” South African Subject
- Deena Dinat (University of British Columbia)
- Chapter 10—“We Come too Late to the Scene”: Goh Poh Seng, Developmental Time, and the Singapore Story
- Peter Ribic (Fontbonne University)
- V.
- Modernity and the Postcolonial Bildungsroman
- Chapter 11— Bad Modernization: The Carceral States Bildungsroman in Postcolonial Africa Craig Smith (Northwestern Polytechnic)
- Chapter 12—“For Every Child, Every Right:” Reading Postcolonial Bildungsromane of the 1990s across the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (1990)
- Prathim-Maya Dora-Laskey (Alma College)
- Chapter 13— Organi(ci)zation of the African Intellectual: Bildung and Representativeness in the Fiction of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
- David Babcock (James Madison University)
- Chapter 14—(Be)Coming of Age in Postmillennial Hong Kong Literature: Between Humans and Things in Hon Lai-Chu’s Works
- Helena Wu (University of British Columbia)
- VI.
- Identity Politics and the Postcolonial Bildungsroman
- Chapter 15— Amos Tutuola and the Novel of Transformation
- Gregory Byala (Temple University)
- Chapter 16— Coming of Age with Ambiguous Identities and a Sense of Shame in Zoë Wicomb’s You Can’t Get Lost in Cape Town and David Dabydeen’s The Intended
- Elizabeth Jackson (University of the West Indies)
- Chapter 17—“No sign of improvement anywhere”: Phantom Development in Seamus Deane’s Reading in the Dark
- Julieann Veronica Ulin (Florida Atlantic University)
- Chapter 18— Replotting the Bildungsroman through a Queer Poetics of the “Post” in Ocean Vuong’s On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous
- Rachel Ann Walsh (Bowling Green State University
- Chapter 19— Childlessness and the Female Nigerian Bildungsroman
- Julia Wurr (University of Oldenburg)
- VII.
- Concluding Remarks
- Afterword
- Sarah Brouillette (Carleton University)
- Contributors
- Index
Comentariile autorului
Index
Recenzii
"The Postcolonial Bildungsroman brings together multi-valent and diverse contexts to consolidate a new conceptualization of the Bildungsroman, reading its postcoloniality in innovative ways." Christopher Ouma, Duke University
"This collection presents the voices of postcolonial and diasporic writers on contemporary critical discussions of identity, especially racialized, gendered, and sexual identities, through the lens of Bildungsroman." Neil ten Kortenaar, University of Toronto Scarborough
"The Postcolonial Bildungsroman addresses a notable gap in scholarship and is essential reading for anyone interested in coming-of-age narratives and the afterlives of genres. By demonstrating the disparate ways that writers from around the world have deployed the Bildungsroman to interrogate imperialism, channel political resistance, and seek historical redress, the volume facilitates a capacious and dynamic understanding of what is sometimes mischaracterized as an outdated genre. Roy and Ugor convincingly show that the Bildungsroman is a timely, urgent vehicle for reimagining postcolonial futures." Sarah L. Townsend, co-editor of The Irish Bildungsroman
"The Postcolonial Bildungsroman examines how a canonical genre, showcasing personality development and artistic autonomy in the mould of European Romantic nationalisms and empire building, became global: not a top-down manual for social mobility but primers coming from below. This multi-faceted collaborative volume ably develops the aesthetic and political dimensions of the postcolonial invention of the bildungsroman. These include the anti-colonial ideologies underpinning this repurposed genre; a new cast and complexion of protagonists drawn from the ranks of the colonised, marginalised, and the oppressed; the quests for serviceable form to enshrine emerging narratives of indigenous selfhood. The two key strengths of this work lie in Roy and Ugor’s refocusing of postcolonial literary studies on questions of form and genre, not simply thematic content, and in the way they have troubled and expanded the very definition of 'postcolonial' by orchestrating dissimilar critical perspectives on literature from a range of erstwhile colonies." Ankhi Mukherjee, University of Oxford
"At last we have a book that gently subverts the idea of the bildungsroman as a European form, a book that is suffused with the energy of looking at one's form and formation in various cultures of daylight and intellectual timezones." Sumana Roy, writer and poet
"This collection presents the voices of postcolonial and diasporic writers on contemporary critical discussions of identity, especially racialized, gendered, and sexual identities, through the lens of Bildungsroman." Neil ten Kortenaar, University of Toronto Scarborough
"The Postcolonial Bildungsroman addresses a notable gap in scholarship and is essential reading for anyone interested in coming-of-age narratives and the afterlives of genres. By demonstrating the disparate ways that writers from around the world have deployed the Bildungsroman to interrogate imperialism, channel political resistance, and seek historical redress, the volume facilitates a capacious and dynamic understanding of what is sometimes mischaracterized as an outdated genre. Roy and Ugor convincingly show that the Bildungsroman is a timely, urgent vehicle for reimagining postcolonial futures." Sarah L. Townsend, co-editor of The Irish Bildungsroman
"The Postcolonial Bildungsroman examines how a canonical genre, showcasing personality development and artistic autonomy in the mould of European Romantic nationalisms and empire building, became global: not a top-down manual for social mobility but primers coming from below. This multi-faceted collaborative volume ably develops the aesthetic and political dimensions of the postcolonial invention of the bildungsroman. These include the anti-colonial ideologies underpinning this repurposed genre; a new cast and complexion of protagonists drawn from the ranks of the colonised, marginalised, and the oppressed; the quests for serviceable form to enshrine emerging narratives of indigenous selfhood. The two key strengths of this work lie in Roy and Ugor’s refocusing of postcolonial literary studies on questions of form and genre, not simply thematic content, and in the way they have troubled and expanded the very definition of 'postcolonial' by orchestrating dissimilar critical perspectives on literature from a range of erstwhile colonies." Ankhi Mukherjee, University of Oxford
"At last we have a book that gently subverts the idea of the bildungsroman as a European form, a book that is suffused with the energy of looking at one's form and formation in various cultures of daylight and intellectual timezones." Sumana Roy, writer and poet