Memory and Postcolonial Studies Synergies and New Directions Cultural Memories Dirk Göttsche (Editor) – Ebook Instant Download/Delivery ISBN(s): 9781788744782,1788744780,9781788744805, 1788744802
Product details:
- ISBN 10:1788744802
- ISBN 13:9781788744805
- Author:Dirk, Göttsche
Memory and Postcolonial Studies
Synergies and New Directions
Table contents:
Part I. Postcolonial Memory and History: African Case Studies
History or memory? Postcolonial politics of memory in Bernhard Jaumann’s Der lange Schatten and M. G. Vassanji’s The Magic of Saida (Dirk Göttsche)
Cross-cultural memory in postcolonial contexts: European imperial heroes in twenty-first-century Africa (Berny Sèbe)
The memory of German, French and British colonialism in Cameroonian postcolonial literature (Richard Tsogang Fossi)
Memory and the contemporary postcolonial condition in José Eduardo Agualusa’s novel A General Theory of Oblivion (Emanuelle Santos)
Part II. Postcolonial Memory and the Black Atlantic
Long-memoried women: Slavery and memory in contemporary Black women’s poetry (Abigail Ward)
“My name is not Tom”: Josiah Henson’s fight to reclaim his identity in Britain, 1876–1877 (Hannah-Rose Murray)
Traumatic memory in the art of Freddy Rodríguez (Stephanie Lewthwaite)
Part III. Diasporic and Multidirectional Memory
“Effacer mes mauvaises pensées”: Memory, writing and trauma in Nina Bouraoui’s autofiction (Antonia Wimbush)
Pulled in all directions: The Shoah, colonialism and exile in Valérie Zenatti’s novel Jacob, Jacob (Rebekah Vince)
Proximate spaces of violence: Multidirectional memory in Rachid Bouchareb’s films Days of Glory and Outside the Law (Alex Hastie)
The reconstruction of history and cultural memory in contemporary Chinese-American women’s life-writing: A comparative study of two memoirs (Fang Tang)
Part IV. Memory and Multi-Layered Identities in Postcolonial Perspective
Literary history and memory in Quebec (Rosemary Chapman)
Post-national Portuguese literature: Reconfiguring the imperial master narrative (Anneliese Hatton)
Writing food and food memories in Turkish-German literature by Renan Demirkan, Hatice Akyün and Emine Sevgi Özdamar (Heike Bartel)
Part V. The Emergence of Postcolonial Memory: Language, Media and Performance
“2 October is not forgotten”: Tlatelolco 1968 massacre and social memory frameworks (Victoria Carpenter)
Writing Rwanda: The languages of killing and suffering (Christopher Davis)
Digital storytelling and performative memory: New approaches to the literary geography of the postcolonial city (Spencer Jordan)
Part VI. Memory and Continental Imperialism in Comparative Postcolonial Studies
Comparative Postcolonial Studies: Southeastern European history as (post-) colonial history (Monika Albrecht)
Collective trauma, transgenerational identity, shared memory: Public TV series dealing with the Ottoman Empire and Anatolian refugees in Greece (Yannis G. S. Papadopoulos)
The working memory in contemporary Latvian culture and society: Between postcolonialism and postcommunism (Benedikts Kalnačs)
The Danube archipelago: The hydropoetics of river islands (Vladimir Zorić)
An empire remembered? Collectivization and colonialism in Mukhamet Shayakhmetov’s memoir The
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