The Cambridge History of Black and Asian British Writing
Herausgeber: Nasta, Susheila; Stein, Mark U.
The Cambridge History of Black and Asian British Writing
Herausgeber: Nasta, Susheila; Stein, Mark U.
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This History covers four centuries of black and Asian British writing from the eighteenth century to the present. It provides contextualized introductions to a wide range of writers, exploring form, style, and genre within necessary social, political, and cultural contexts.
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This History covers four centuries of black and Asian British writing from the eighteenth century to the present. It provides contextualized introductions to a wide range of writers, exploring form, style, and genre within necessary social, political, and cultural contexts.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 758
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. Januar 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 49mm
- Gewicht: 1361g
- ISBN-13: 9781107195448
- ISBN-10: 1107195446
- Artikelnr.: 56875685
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 758
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. Januar 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 49mm
- Gewicht: 1361g
- ISBN-13: 9781107195448
- ISBN-10: 1107195446
- Artikelnr.: 56875685
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Introduction Susheila Nasta and Mark U. Stein; Part I. New Formations: The
Eighteenth to the Early Twentieth Century: Preface; 1. Narratives of
resistance in the literary archives of slavery Markman Ellis; 2.
Writer-travellers and fugitives: insider-outsiders Antoinette Burton; 3.
Exoticisations of the self: the first 'Buddha of Suburbia' Mona Narain; 4.
Black people of letters: authors, activists, abolitionists Vincent
Carretta; 5. Engaging the public: photo- and print-journalism Pallavi
Rastogi; Part II. Uneven Histories: Charting Terrains in the Twentieth
Century: Preface; Section 1. Global Locals: Making Tracks at the Heart of
Empire: 6. Between the wars: Caribbean, Pan-African, and Asian networks
Delia Jarrett-Macauley and Susheila Nasta; 7. Mobile modernisms: black and
Asian articulations Anna Snaith; 8. Establishing material platforms in
literary culture in the 1930s and 1940s Ruvani Ranasinha; 9. Transnational
cultural exchange: the BBC as contact zone James Procter; 10. Political
autobiography and life-writing: Gandhi, Nehru, Kenyatta, and Naidu Javed
Majeed; 11. Staging early black and Asian drama in Britain Colin Chambers;
Section 2. Disappointed Citizens: The Pains and Pleasures of Exile: 12.
Looking back, looking forward: revisiting the Windrush myth Alison Donnell;
13. Double displacements, diasporic attachments: location and accommodation
J. Dillon Brown; 14. Wide-angled modernities and alternative metropolitan
imaginaries Mpalive-Hangson Msiska; 15. Forging collective identities: the
Caribbean artists movement and the emergence of black Britain Chris
Campbell; 16. Breaking new ground: many tongues, many forms Ashok Bery; 17.
The lure of postwar London: networks of people, print, and organisations
Gail Low; 18. Looking beyond, shifting the gaze: writers in motion
Bénédicte Ledent; Section 3. Here to Stay: Forging Dynamic Alliances: 19.
Sonic solidarities: the dissenting voices of dub Henghameh Saroukhani; 20.
Vernacular voices: fashioning idiom and poetic form Sarah Lawson Welsh; 21.
Narratives of survival: social realism and civil rights Chris Weedon; 22.
Black and Asian British theatre taking the stage: from the 1950s to the
millennium Meenakshi Ponnuswami; 23. The writer and the critic:
conversations between literature and theory Vijay Mishra; 24. Forging
connections: anthologies, collectives, and the politics of inclusion Nicola
L. Abram; 25. Reading the 'black' in the 'Union Jack': institutionalising
black and Asian British writing Roger Bromley; Part III. Writing the
Contemporary: Preface; Section 4. Looking Back, Looking Forward: 26.
Diasporic translocations: many homes, multiple forms Peter Morey; 27.
Reinventing the nation: black and Asian British representations John
McLeod; 28. Reclaiming the past: Black and Asian British genealogies Tobias
Döring; 29. Expanding realism, thinking new worlds Tabish Khair; 30.
Writing lives, inventing selves: Black and Asian women's life-writing Ole
Birk Laursen; 31. Black and Asian women's poetry: writing across
generations Denise deCaires Narain; Section 5. Framing New Visions: 32.
Through a different lens: drama, film, new media, and television Florian
Stadtler; 33. Children's literature and the construction of contemporary
multicultures Susanne Reichl; 34. Redefining the boundaries: black and
Asian queer desire Kate Houlden; 35. Prizing otherness: black and Asian
British writing in the global marketplace Sarah Brouillette and John R.
Coleman; 36. Frontline fictions: popular forms from crime to grime Felipe
Espinoza Garrido and Julian Wacker; 37. Reimagining Africa: contemporary
figurations by African Britons Madhu Krishnan; 38. Post-secular
perspectives: writing and fundamentalisms Rehana Ahmed; 39. Post-ethnicity
and the politics of positionality Sara Upstone; Select bibliography; Index.
Eighteenth to the Early Twentieth Century: Preface; 1. Narratives of
resistance in the literary archives of slavery Markman Ellis; 2.
Writer-travellers and fugitives: insider-outsiders Antoinette Burton; 3.
Exoticisations of the self: the first 'Buddha of Suburbia' Mona Narain; 4.
Black people of letters: authors, activists, abolitionists Vincent
Carretta; 5. Engaging the public: photo- and print-journalism Pallavi
Rastogi; Part II. Uneven Histories: Charting Terrains in the Twentieth
Century: Preface; Section 1. Global Locals: Making Tracks at the Heart of
Empire: 6. Between the wars: Caribbean, Pan-African, and Asian networks
Delia Jarrett-Macauley and Susheila Nasta; 7. Mobile modernisms: black and
Asian articulations Anna Snaith; 8. Establishing material platforms in
literary culture in the 1930s and 1940s Ruvani Ranasinha; 9. Transnational
cultural exchange: the BBC as contact zone James Procter; 10. Political
autobiography and life-writing: Gandhi, Nehru, Kenyatta, and Naidu Javed
Majeed; 11. Staging early black and Asian drama in Britain Colin Chambers;
Section 2. Disappointed Citizens: The Pains and Pleasures of Exile: 12.
Looking back, looking forward: revisiting the Windrush myth Alison Donnell;
13. Double displacements, diasporic attachments: location and accommodation
J. Dillon Brown; 14. Wide-angled modernities and alternative metropolitan
imaginaries Mpalive-Hangson Msiska; 15. Forging collective identities: the
Caribbean artists movement and the emergence of black Britain Chris
Campbell; 16. Breaking new ground: many tongues, many forms Ashok Bery; 17.
The lure of postwar London: networks of people, print, and organisations
Gail Low; 18. Looking beyond, shifting the gaze: writers in motion
Bénédicte Ledent; Section 3. Here to Stay: Forging Dynamic Alliances: 19.
Sonic solidarities: the dissenting voices of dub Henghameh Saroukhani; 20.
Vernacular voices: fashioning idiom and poetic form Sarah Lawson Welsh; 21.
Narratives of survival: social realism and civil rights Chris Weedon; 22.
Black and Asian British theatre taking the stage: from the 1950s to the
millennium Meenakshi Ponnuswami; 23. The writer and the critic:
conversations between literature and theory Vijay Mishra; 24. Forging
connections: anthologies, collectives, and the politics of inclusion Nicola
L. Abram; 25. Reading the 'black' in the 'Union Jack': institutionalising
black and Asian British writing Roger Bromley; Part III. Writing the
Contemporary: Preface; Section 4. Looking Back, Looking Forward: 26.
Diasporic translocations: many homes, multiple forms Peter Morey; 27.
Reinventing the nation: black and Asian British representations John
McLeod; 28. Reclaiming the past: Black and Asian British genealogies Tobias
Döring; 29. Expanding realism, thinking new worlds Tabish Khair; 30.
Writing lives, inventing selves: Black and Asian women's life-writing Ole
Birk Laursen; 31. Black and Asian women's poetry: writing across
generations Denise deCaires Narain; Section 5. Framing New Visions: 32.
Through a different lens: drama, film, new media, and television Florian
Stadtler; 33. Children's literature and the construction of contemporary
multicultures Susanne Reichl; 34. Redefining the boundaries: black and
Asian queer desire Kate Houlden; 35. Prizing otherness: black and Asian
British writing in the global marketplace Sarah Brouillette and John R.
Coleman; 36. Frontline fictions: popular forms from crime to grime Felipe
Espinoza Garrido and Julian Wacker; 37. Reimagining Africa: contemporary
figurations by African Britons Madhu Krishnan; 38. Post-secular
perspectives: writing and fundamentalisms Rehana Ahmed; 39. Post-ethnicity
and the politics of positionality Sara Upstone; Select bibliography; Index.
Introduction Susheila Nasta and Mark U. Stein; Part I. New Formations: The
Eighteenth to the Early Twentieth Century: Preface; 1. Narratives of
resistance in the literary archives of slavery Markman Ellis; 2.
Writer-travellers and fugitives: insider-outsiders Antoinette Burton; 3.
Exoticisations of the self: the first 'Buddha of Suburbia' Mona Narain; 4.
Black people of letters: authors, activists, abolitionists Vincent
Carretta; 5. Engaging the public: photo- and print-journalism Pallavi
Rastogi; Part II. Uneven Histories: Charting Terrains in the Twentieth
Century: Preface; Section 1. Global Locals: Making Tracks at the Heart of
Empire: 6. Between the wars: Caribbean, Pan-African, and Asian networks
Delia Jarrett-Macauley and Susheila Nasta; 7. Mobile modernisms: black and
Asian articulations Anna Snaith; 8. Establishing material platforms in
literary culture in the 1930s and 1940s Ruvani Ranasinha; 9. Transnational
cultural exchange: the BBC as contact zone James Procter; 10. Political
autobiography and life-writing: Gandhi, Nehru, Kenyatta, and Naidu Javed
Majeed; 11. Staging early black and Asian drama in Britain Colin Chambers;
Section 2. Disappointed Citizens: The Pains and Pleasures of Exile: 12.
Looking back, looking forward: revisiting the Windrush myth Alison Donnell;
13. Double displacements, diasporic attachments: location and accommodation
J. Dillon Brown; 14. Wide-angled modernities and alternative metropolitan
imaginaries Mpalive-Hangson Msiska; 15. Forging collective identities: the
Caribbean artists movement and the emergence of black Britain Chris
Campbell; 16. Breaking new ground: many tongues, many forms Ashok Bery; 17.
The lure of postwar London: networks of people, print, and organisations
Gail Low; 18. Looking beyond, shifting the gaze: writers in motion
Bénédicte Ledent; Section 3. Here to Stay: Forging Dynamic Alliances: 19.
Sonic solidarities: the dissenting voices of dub Henghameh Saroukhani; 20.
Vernacular voices: fashioning idiom and poetic form Sarah Lawson Welsh; 21.
Narratives of survival: social realism and civil rights Chris Weedon; 22.
Black and Asian British theatre taking the stage: from the 1950s to the
millennium Meenakshi Ponnuswami; 23. The writer and the critic:
conversations between literature and theory Vijay Mishra; 24. Forging
connections: anthologies, collectives, and the politics of inclusion Nicola
L. Abram; 25. Reading the 'black' in the 'Union Jack': institutionalising
black and Asian British writing Roger Bromley; Part III. Writing the
Contemporary: Preface; Section 4. Looking Back, Looking Forward: 26.
Diasporic translocations: many homes, multiple forms Peter Morey; 27.
Reinventing the nation: black and Asian British representations John
McLeod; 28. Reclaiming the past: Black and Asian British genealogies Tobias
Döring; 29. Expanding realism, thinking new worlds Tabish Khair; 30.
Writing lives, inventing selves: Black and Asian women's life-writing Ole
Birk Laursen; 31. Black and Asian women's poetry: writing across
generations Denise deCaires Narain; Section 5. Framing New Visions: 32.
Through a different lens: drama, film, new media, and television Florian
Stadtler; 33. Children's literature and the construction of contemporary
multicultures Susanne Reichl; 34. Redefining the boundaries: black and
Asian queer desire Kate Houlden; 35. Prizing otherness: black and Asian
British writing in the global marketplace Sarah Brouillette and John R.
Coleman; 36. Frontline fictions: popular forms from crime to grime Felipe
Espinoza Garrido and Julian Wacker; 37. Reimagining Africa: contemporary
figurations by African Britons Madhu Krishnan; 38. Post-secular
perspectives: writing and fundamentalisms Rehana Ahmed; 39. Post-ethnicity
and the politics of positionality Sara Upstone; Select bibliography; Index.
Eighteenth to the Early Twentieth Century: Preface; 1. Narratives of
resistance in the literary archives of slavery Markman Ellis; 2.
Writer-travellers and fugitives: insider-outsiders Antoinette Burton; 3.
Exoticisations of the self: the first 'Buddha of Suburbia' Mona Narain; 4.
Black people of letters: authors, activists, abolitionists Vincent
Carretta; 5. Engaging the public: photo- and print-journalism Pallavi
Rastogi; Part II. Uneven Histories: Charting Terrains in the Twentieth
Century: Preface; Section 1. Global Locals: Making Tracks at the Heart of
Empire: 6. Between the wars: Caribbean, Pan-African, and Asian networks
Delia Jarrett-Macauley and Susheila Nasta; 7. Mobile modernisms: black and
Asian articulations Anna Snaith; 8. Establishing material platforms in
literary culture in the 1930s and 1940s Ruvani Ranasinha; 9. Transnational
cultural exchange: the BBC as contact zone James Procter; 10. Political
autobiography and life-writing: Gandhi, Nehru, Kenyatta, and Naidu Javed
Majeed; 11. Staging early black and Asian drama in Britain Colin Chambers;
Section 2. Disappointed Citizens: The Pains and Pleasures of Exile: 12.
Looking back, looking forward: revisiting the Windrush myth Alison Donnell;
13. Double displacements, diasporic attachments: location and accommodation
J. Dillon Brown; 14. Wide-angled modernities and alternative metropolitan
imaginaries Mpalive-Hangson Msiska; 15. Forging collective identities: the
Caribbean artists movement and the emergence of black Britain Chris
Campbell; 16. Breaking new ground: many tongues, many forms Ashok Bery; 17.
The lure of postwar London: networks of people, print, and organisations
Gail Low; 18. Looking beyond, shifting the gaze: writers in motion
Bénédicte Ledent; Section 3. Here to Stay: Forging Dynamic Alliances: 19.
Sonic solidarities: the dissenting voices of dub Henghameh Saroukhani; 20.
Vernacular voices: fashioning idiom and poetic form Sarah Lawson Welsh; 21.
Narratives of survival: social realism and civil rights Chris Weedon; 22.
Black and Asian British theatre taking the stage: from the 1950s to the
millennium Meenakshi Ponnuswami; 23. The writer and the critic:
conversations between literature and theory Vijay Mishra; 24. Forging
connections: anthologies, collectives, and the politics of inclusion Nicola
L. Abram; 25. Reading the 'black' in the 'Union Jack': institutionalising
black and Asian British writing Roger Bromley; Part III. Writing the
Contemporary: Preface; Section 4. Looking Back, Looking Forward: 26.
Diasporic translocations: many homes, multiple forms Peter Morey; 27.
Reinventing the nation: black and Asian British representations John
McLeod; 28. Reclaiming the past: Black and Asian British genealogies Tobias
Döring; 29. Expanding realism, thinking new worlds Tabish Khair; 30.
Writing lives, inventing selves: Black and Asian women's life-writing Ole
Birk Laursen; 31. Black and Asian women's poetry: writing across
generations Denise deCaires Narain; Section 5. Framing New Visions: 32.
Through a different lens: drama, film, new media, and television Florian
Stadtler; 33. Children's literature and the construction of contemporary
multicultures Susanne Reichl; 34. Redefining the boundaries: black and
Asian queer desire Kate Houlden; 35. Prizing otherness: black and Asian
British writing in the global marketplace Sarah Brouillette and John R.
Coleman; 36. Frontline fictions: popular forms from crime to grime Felipe
Espinoza Garrido and Julian Wacker; 37. Reimagining Africa: contemporary
figurations by African Britons Madhu Krishnan; 38. Post-secular
perspectives: writing and fundamentalisms Rehana Ahmed; 39. Post-ethnicity
and the politics of positionality Sara Upstone; Select bibliography; Index.