Representing Poverty and Precarity in a Postcolonial World / / edited by Barbara Schmidt-Haberkamp, Marion Gymnich, and Klaus P. Schneider.

Poverty and precarity are among the most pressing social issues of today and have become a significant thematic focus and analytical tool in the humanities in the last two decades. This volume brings together an international group of scholars who investigate conceptualisations of poverty and precar...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Cross/Cultures Series ; Volume 215
:
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Leiden, The Netherlands : : Koninklijke Brill nv,, [2022]
©2022
Year of Publication:2022
Edition:First edition.
Language:English
Series:Cross/cultures ; Volume 215.
Physical Description:1 electronic resource (302 p.)
Notes:Includes index.
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Table of Contents:
  • Half Title
  • Series Information
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Contents
  • Notes on Contributors
  • Representing Poverty and Precarityin a Postcolonial World: An Introduction
  • Overview
  • Works Cited
  • Part 1 Media, Performance, Genres
  • Chapter 1 Poverty, (Neo)orientalism and the Cinematic Re-presentation of 'Dark India'
  • 1 Orientalism, Exoticism and India
  • 2 'Dark India' Narratives
  • 3 The Slum and the Exotica of Poverty
  • 4 Hindi Cinema and the Aesthetic of Poverty
  • 5 Conclusion
  • Works Cited
  • Chapter 2 "Performing with What Little They Have": Street Theatre in the Slums of Ahmedabad
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 History of the Community
  • 3 Budhan Theatre: Actors, Aims, Modes of Performance
  • 4 Budhan's Plays
  • 5 Adapting European Plays
  • 6 Conclusion
  • Works Cited
  • Chapter 3 Overcoming the 'Crisis of Nonrelation' through Formal Innovation: Aboriginal Short Story Cycles
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 The Promise of Relations - Aboriginal Short Story Cycles and Reading Practices
  • 3 Swallow the Air - Overcoming the 'Crisis of Nonrelation'
  • 4 Defying Reader Expectations
  • 5 Conclusion - The Potential of Relationality
  • Works Cited
  • Part 2 Intersectional Approaches
  • Chapter 4 Precarious Lives in Tony Birch's Common People (2017)
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Agency and Resilience
  • 3 The Charity of Others
  • 4 The Precarity of Family Life
  • 5 Conclusion
  • Works Cited
  • Chapter 5 Diasporic Female Precarity and Agency in Sunjeev Sahota's The Year of the Runaways
  • 1 Conceptualizing Female Precarity and Agency
  • 2 The Girl from God
  • 3 Gendered Economic Precarity
  • 4 Religious Faith, Honour and Moral Responsibility
  • Acknowledgements
  • Works Cited
  • Chapter 6 Narrating the 'Black Male Underclass': The Ethics and Aesthetics of Coming into Representation
  • 1 Deconstructing the 'Violent Avenger' in East of Acre Lane.
  • 2 Confronting Enemies outside and within the Community
  • 3 Empathising with the 'Noble Savage' in Pigeon English
  • Works Cited
  • Chapter 7 Breaking the Cycle of Heathcliff: Precarious Subjects from Emily Brontë to Caryl Phillips
  • 1 Brontë's Lost Child
  • 2 The Lost Child Writing back
  • 3 Being Outcast - Between Nature and Nurture
  • 4 The Precarity of Orphanhood and Familial Bonds
  • 5 Cycles of Loss
  • 6 Conclusion
  • Works Cited
  • Part 3 (Publication) Politics and Precarity
  • Chapter 8 Voices of Ugandan Women Writers: Positioning femrite Since 2006
  • 1 femrite within the Ugandan Literary Landscape: The First Ten Years
  • 2 femrite: Challenges and Achievements Since 2006
  • 3 Recent Developments in femrite
  • Works Cited
  • Chapter 9 Poverty, Precarity and the Ethics of Representing Africa
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Africa and the Paradox of the Migration Impulse
  • 3 African Literary Production and the "Extroverted" Narrative
  • 4 Rethinking the Role of African Writers
  • 5 Conclusion
  • Works Cited
  • Part 4 Environmental Precarity
  • Chapter 10 Sovereignty at the Margins: The Oceanic Future of the Subaltern
  • 1 The Oceanic Turn
  • 2 The Muddy Texture of Precarity
  • 3 Sovereignty at the Margins
  • Works Cited
  • Chapter 11 Plantation and Planet: Environmental Precarity in Anglophone Caribbean World Writing
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 World Writing as Ethical Imperative
  • 3 Poet(h)ic Visions of the World
  • 4 Conclusion
  • Works Cited
  • Part 5 Representing Refugees and Immigrants
  • Chapter 12 Narrative Zones of Refuge in The Lost Boy by Aher Arop Bol and A Man of Good Hope by Jonny Steinberg
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Home and Unhoming
  • 3 Aher Arop Bol, The Lost Boy (2009) - A Refugee Memoir
  • 4 Jonny Steinberg, A Man of Good Hope (2014) - A Mediated Narrative
  • 5 Living between Zones
  • 6 Refiguring the Refugee
  • 7 Conclusion
  • Works Cited.
  • Chapter 13 "Bringing the Wisdom of Wall Street to Limbe": Precarity and (American) Dream Narratives in Imbolo Mbue's Behold the Dreamers
  • 1 American Dream Discourse and Precarity in the Novel
  • 2 Re-living the Dream: Behold the Dreamer's Use of Dream Tropes
  • 3 Translocating the American Dream
  • Works Cited
  • Chapter 14 The Scenario of (Im-)Migrants as Scroungers and/or Parasites in British Media Discourses
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Data and Methodology
  • 3 Immigrants as 'Parasites'
  • 3.1 Immigrants as 'Parasites' in the Have Your Say Discussion Forum
  • 3.2 Immigrants as 'Parasites' in the Press
  • 3.3 Immigrants as 'Parasites' in the Blogosphere
  • 4 Conclusions
  • Works Cited
  • Chapter 15 Narrating Precarious Lives: Refugee Tales, African Titanics, and The Year of the Runaways
  • 1 Refugees and Narrative Representation
  • 2 Refugee Writing, Precarity and Ethical Engagement
  • 3 Mediated, Collective Story-Telling in Refugee Tales
  • 4 The Poetics of Risk: African Titanics
  • 5 Migration and Precarity in The Year of the Runaways
  • 6 Conclusion: Precarious Lives and Frameworks of Perception
  • Works Cited
  • Index.