Word and image in colonial and postcolonial literatures and cultures / / edited by Michael Meyer.

Verbal imagery and visual images as well as the intricate relationships between verbal and visual representations have long shaped the imagination and the practice of intercultural relationships. The contributions to this volume take a fresh look at the ideology of form, especially the gendered and...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Cross/cultures : readings in the post/colonial literatures in English ; 116
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TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Amsterdam ;, New York : : Rodopi,, 2009.
Year of Publication:2009
Language:English
Series:Cross/Cultures 116/14.
Physical Description:1 online resource (xliii, 379 pages).
Notes:"ASNEL Papers appear under the auspices of the Gesellschaft für die Neuen Englischsprachigen Literaturen e.V. (GNEL)"--Series title page.
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Other title:Word and image in colonial and postcolonial literatures and cultures
Preliminary Material --
Liberating the Strange Fish: Visual Representations of Caliban and Their Successive Emancipation from Shakespeare’s Original Text /
Hogarth and the Other /
“The free treatment of topics usually taboo’d”: Glimpses of the Harem in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Literature and the Fine Arts /
Tourist Places, Other Gazes: Robert Louis Stevenson’s Edinburgh /
“Picture is a Silent Talker” (Apagya): African Studio Photography in the English Classroom /
A Black and White Nation?: The ‘New’ South Africa in Zapiro’s Cartoons /
Zakes Mda’s Representation of South African Reality: in Ways of Dying, The Madonna of Excelsior, and The Whale Caller /
Looking Out and Looking In: The Dynamic Use of Words and Images in the Oeuvre of Breyten Breytenbach /
Whiteness as a Category of Literary Analysis: Racializing Markers and Race-Evasiveness in J.M. Coetzee’s Disgrace /
“Just for show”: Visuality in Timothy Mo’s The Monkey King /
On Pickles, Pictures, and Words: Pick-torial Preservation and Verbal Self-Regeneration in Salman Rushdie’s Midnight’s Children /
“Neither united nor separated”: Negotiating Difference in Ashutosh Gowariker’s Lagaan and Ketan Mehta’s Mangal Pandey /
Transcultural Gender Interrogations in Bride and Prejudice: Intertextual Encounters of the South Asian Diasporic Kind /
Missing in Act(i)on: Asian-British Pop Music Between Resistance and Commercialization /
Vernacular Landscape: Narrative Space in Peter Carey’s True History of the Kelly Gang /
Regaining the Past and Shaping the Present: Indigenous Children’s Fiction from Aotearoa New Zealand, Canada, and the USA /
Between Words and Images: Negotiating the Meaning of Home in Ken Lum’s There Is No Place Like Home /
The Mass-Slaughter of Native Americans in Jim Jarmusch’s Dead Man: A Complex Interplay of Word and Image /
Notes on Contributors.
Summary:Verbal imagery and visual images as well as the intricate relationships between verbal and visual representations have long shaped the imagination and the practice of intercultural relationships. The contributions to this volume take a fresh look at the ideology of form, especially the gendered and racial implications of the gaze and the voice in various media and intermedial transformations. Analyses of how culturally specific forms of visual and verbal expression are individually understood and manipulated complement reflections on the potential and limitations of representation. The juxtaposition of visual and verbal signifiers explores the gap between them as a space beyond cultural boundaries. Topics treated include: Caliban; English satirical iconotexts; Oriental travel writing and illustration; expatriate description and picturesque illustration of Edinburgh; ethnographic film; African studio photography; South African cartoons; imagery, ekphrasis, and race in South African art and fiction; face and visuality, representation and memory in Asian fiction; Bollywood; Asian historical film; Asian-British pop music; Australian landscape in painting and fiction; indigenous children’s fiction from Aotearoa New Zealand, Canada, and the USA; Canadian photography; Native Americans in film. Writers and artists discussed include: Philip Kwame Apagya; the Asian Dub Foundation; Breyten Breytenbach; Richard Burton; Peter Carey; Gurinder Chadha; Daniel Chodowiecki; J.M. Coetzee; Ashutosh Gowariker; Patricia Grace; W. Greatbatch; Hogarth; Francis K. Honny; Jim Jarmusch; Robyn Kahukiwa; Seydou Keita; Thomas King; Vladyana Krykorka; Alfred Kubin; Michael Arvaarluk Kusugak; Kathleen and Michael Lacapa; László Lakner; George Littlechild; Ken Lum; Franz Marc; Zakes Mda; Ketan Mehta; M.I.A. (Maya Arulpragasam); Timothy Mo; William Kent Monkman; Lady Mary Wortley Montagu; John Hamilton Mortimer; Sidney Nolan; Jean Rouch; Salman Rushdie; William Shakespeare; Robert Louis Stevenson; Richard Van Camp; Zapiro.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN:9042027444
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: edited by Michael Meyer.