Combined and uneven development : towards a new theory of world-literature
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Combined and uneven development : towards a new theory of world-literature
(Postcolonialism across the disciplines / series editors, Graham Huggan, Andrew Thompson, 17)
Liverpool University Press, 2015
- : limp
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Note
Includes bibliographic references (pages 168-187) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The ambition of this book is to resituate the problem of 'world literature', considered as a revived category of theoretical enquiry, by pursuing the literary-cultural implications of the theory of combined and uneven development. This theory has a long pedigree in the social sciences, where it continues to stimulate debate. But its implications for cultural analysis have received less attention, even though the theory might be said to draw attention to a central - perhaps the central - arc or trajectory of modern(ist) production in literature and the other arts worldwide. It is in the conjuncture of combined and uneven development, on the one hand, and the recently interrogated and expanded categories of 'world literature' and 'modernism', on the other, that this book looks for its specific contours. In the two theoretical chapters that frame the book, the authors argue for a single, but radically uneven world-system; a singular modernity, combined and uneven; and a literature that variously registers this combined unevenness in both its form and content to reveal itself as, properly speaking, world-literature. In the four substantive chapters that then follow, the authors explore a selection of modern-era fictions in which the potential of their method of comparativism seems to be most dramatically highlighted. They treat the novel paradigmatically, not exemplarily, as a literary form in which combined and uneven development is manifested with particular salience, due in no small part to its fundamental association with the rise of capitalism and its status in peripheral and semi-peripheral societies as a 'modernising' import. The peculiar plasticity and hybridity of the novel form enables it to incorporate not only multiple literary levels, genres and modes, but also other non-literary and archaic cultural forms - so that, for example, realist elements might be mixed with more experimental modes of narration, or older literary devices might be reactivated in juxtaposition with more contemporary frames.
Table of Contents
1. World-Literature in the Context of Combined and Uneven Development
2. The Question of Peripheral Realism
3. 'Irrealism' in Tayeb Salih's Season of Migration to the North
4. Oboroten Spectres: Lycanthropy, Neoliberalism and New Russia in Victor Pelevin
5. The European Literary Periphery
6. Ivan Vladislavic: Traversing the Uneven City
Notes
Works Cited
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"