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Description

Mapping Minor/Small and World Literatures: Periphery and Center makes a declarative intervention in debates about world literature, redefining the boundaries between the center and periphery to rejuvenate long-established assumptions about significance and insignificance. In this book, African American literature (emerging from the often overlooked pink periphery, a cramped space of minor literature), works from the Faroe Islands, Basque literature, First Nation Canadian literature, Western narratives about peripheral China, Kurdish literature, the ultraminor literary space of Antigua, the 'favela' of Brazilian literature, as well as the hyperlocal narratives of Australian and New Zealand literature are all studied for their meaningful role within the world literary system. Additionally, working-class writing and the literary contributions of individuals on the margins of their own societies are given a voice, ensuring that the world literary space does not merely represent the perspectives of dominant elites. Unlike other descriptions of world literature, which have frequently allowed the grandeur and breadth of the global to overshadow the imperative for authentic literary biodiversity, this anthology, featuring contributions from diverse scholars representing various countries and backgrounds, actively deconstructs the structures of power and domination inherent in Western-European-centered world literature, minor literature, and small literature.

Table of Contents

List of Figures
Introduction: It was Pink on the Map: Periphery and Central Literary Spaces of World Literature

Part One: From Minor to Ultraminor Literary Space

Chapter 1: Erasing the Pink on the World Atlas: Re-Mapping African American Literature, Yanli He
Chapter 2: A Cramped Space: Revisiting Minor Literature from a Decentered Center and Displaced Periphery, Rahime Çokay Nebioglu
Chapter 3: Ultraminor Nation and Literature: William Heinesen as a Nobel Prize Candidate from the Faroe Islands, Bergur Rønne Moberg

Part Two: From Marginal, Regional, National to World Literary Space

Chapter 4: Cultural Discontent in Basque Literature: An Geocritical Approach in Spanish Literature and World Literature, Iker Arranz
Chapter 5: The Literary Space of Canadian Native Literature in Canadian Literature, Jonathan Locke Hart
Chapter 6: From T-O Map to Big Game: Navigating the Journey of Asia, China, and Southwest China in Western Atlas, Yanli He
Chapter 7: Eurocentric Aestheticism, Reproducer of Western Symbolic Hegemony: Form-Politics Analysis in Ata Nahai's Kurdish Nove: Birds in Gale, Kawan Mohammadpur

Part Three: Hyperlocal Literary Space and the Global South

Chapter 8: Delinquent Itinerary: Jamaica Kincaid’s A Small Place in World Literature, Ryan Winet
Chapter 9: Autobiographical Impulse and Peripheral Subjectivation in Carolina Maria de Jesus’s Diaries, Fabio Akcelrud Durão
Chapter 10: The Hyperlocal and Conjectural Spaces of Australian and New Zealand Literatures in the World System, Nicholas Birns
Epilogue: A World in Which Nothing is Pink on the Map: New Minor, Small, and World Literary Atlas
About the Contributors

Product details

Published Jun 05 2024
Format Hardback
Edition 1st
Extent 296
ISBN 9781666944662
Imprint Lexington Books
Dimensions 9 x 6 inches
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Anthology Editor

Yanli He

Anthology Editor

Nicholas Birns

Contributor

Iker Arranz

Contributor

Nicholas Birns

Contributor

Yanli He

Contributor

Ryan Winet

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