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Full Description
Postcolonial Naturalism proposes an innovative periodizing schema for historicizing contemporary Anglophone fiction. Engaging and revising the materialist paradigm of the Warwick Research Collective's concept of "world-literature," Fredric Jameson's mapping of modernity's cultural periods, and Christopher L. Hill's positing of a transnational naturalism, Eric D. Smith theorizes "postcolonial naturalism" as a structurally determined cultural logic rather than as a literary technique or style. Supported by careful, theoretically and critically sophisticated analyses of exemplary literary works, this important intervention invites us to reconsider the living history of aesthetic naturalism as well as its social and political implications for the practice of world-literature in the aftermath of anticolonial resistance.
Contents
Introduction. Naturalism, Postcolonialism, and World-Literature
Chapter 1. Narrative Desolation and The Impulse-Image in V.S. Naipaul's Guerrillas
Chapter 2. Neither Us Nor Ours: The Dialectic of Hysteria and the Beautiful Soul in the Novels of Lewis Nkosi
Chapter 3. Heredity and Horizon in the Postcolonial Bildungsroman: Rhys, Cliff, and Adiga
Chapter 4. Future Perfect and the Impossible Present: Two Faces of Postcolonial Anti-Utopianism
Conclusion. Naturalism, or, the Cultural Logic of Capital in Crisis