The Luxury of Nationalist Despair : : George Lamming's Fiction as Decolonizing Project / / A J Simoes da Silva.

This book offers a timely critique of the work of the Barbadian novelist George Lamming, examining the ways in which his novels exhibit the "luxury of nationalist despair" and exploring the tensions between his strongly voiced anti-colonialism and his ambiguously articulated politics of se...

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Place / Publishing House:Leiden : : Brill,, 2000.
Year of Publication:2000
Language:English
Physical Description:1 online resource
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spelling Silva, A J Simoes da, author.
The Luxury of Nationalist Despair : George Lamming's Fiction as Decolonizing Project / A J Simoes da Silva.
Leiden : Brill, 2000.
1 online resource
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource cr rdacarrier
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
This book offers a timely critique of the work of the Barbadian novelist George Lamming, examining the ways in which his novels exhibit the "luxury of nationalist despair" and exploring the tensions between his strongly voiced anti-colonialism and his ambiguously articulated politics of self. Although stressing the place occupied by Lamming and his work in the context of an anti-colonial first generation of 'nation-writing' that has emerged in the formerly colonized world over the past half-century, the study also addresses the novelist's problematic, reductive focus on a nationalist project that is ultimately deeply flawed - in essence, the result of an uneasy relationship between form and thesis. Lamming's continued struggle with the novel as a genre, especially with its ability to get beyond the cultural and political baggage of colonialism, demonstrates the power of one of his most poignant assertions: "the colonial experience [.] is a continuing psychic experience that has to be dealt with long after the actual situation formally 'ends'." Written from a postcolonial perspective, the study draws also on contemporary feminist criticism in order to examine Lamming's characteristically simplistic depiction of female characters in terms of a greater willingness to embody the neocolonial. The book starts by addressing the place Lamming's work occupies both within postcolonial writing at large and specifically within Caribbean literature. Subsequent chapters provide close textual readings of Lamming's six novels, paired in terms of their foregrounding of issues of race, gender and class. Despite a clear shift in Lamming's thematic focus on the rewriting of Caliban's project, with his last novel offering a basis for a re-imagining of the post/colonial encounter, there remains a perturbing inability to relinquish the privileged stance afforded the postcolonial intellectual in self-imposed exile (cultural, much more than geographical). The book represents an important contribution to criticism on the work of one of the most influential voices in postcolonial literature of the last fifty years.
Acknowledgements. 1 The Luxury of Nationalist Despair. 2 Race, Identity and the National Idea(l). 3 Gender, Sexuality and the Nation. 4 The Past is the Future. 5 Conclusion. Works cited. --.
Authors, Caribbean 20th century Interviews.
90-420-1431-8
language English
format eBook
author Silva, A J Simoes da,
spellingShingle Silva, A J Simoes da,
The Luxury of Nationalist Despair : George Lamming's Fiction as Decolonizing Project /
Acknowledgements. 1 The Luxury of Nationalist Despair. 2 Race, Identity and the National Idea(l). 3 Gender, Sexuality and the Nation. 4 The Past is the Future. 5 Conclusion. Works cited. --.
author_facet Silva, A J Simoes da,
author_variant a j s d s ajsd ajsds
author_role VerfasserIn
author_sort Silva, A J Simoes da,
title The Luxury of Nationalist Despair : George Lamming's Fiction as Decolonizing Project /
title_sub George Lamming's Fiction as Decolonizing Project /
title_full The Luxury of Nationalist Despair : George Lamming's Fiction as Decolonizing Project / A J Simoes da Silva.
title_fullStr The Luxury of Nationalist Despair : George Lamming's Fiction as Decolonizing Project / A J Simoes da Silva.
title_full_unstemmed The Luxury of Nationalist Despair : George Lamming's Fiction as Decolonizing Project / A J Simoes da Silva.
title_auth The Luxury of Nationalist Despair : George Lamming's Fiction as Decolonizing Project /
title_new The Luxury of Nationalist Despair :
title_sort the luxury of nationalist despair : george lamming's fiction as decolonizing project /
publisher Brill,
publishDate 2000
physical 1 online resource
contents Acknowledgements. 1 The Luxury of Nationalist Despair. 2 Race, Identity and the National Idea(l). 3 Gender, Sexuality and the Nation. 4 The Past is the Future. 5 Conclusion. Works cited. --.
isbn 90-04-48622-4
90-420-1431-8
callnumber-first P - Language and Literature
callnumber-subject PQ - French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese Literature
callnumber-label PQ3941
callnumber-sort PQ 43941 S558 42000
genre_facet Interviews.
era_facet 20th century
illustrated Not Illustrated
dewey-hundreds 800 - Literature
dewey-tens 840 - French & related literatures
dewey-ones 840 - Literatures of Romance languages
dewey-full 840.99729
dewey-sort 3840.99729
dewey-raw 840.99729
dewey-search 840.99729
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Written from a postcolonial perspective, the study draws also on contemporary feminist criticism in order to examine Lamming's characteristically simplistic depiction of female characters in terms of a greater willingness to embody the neocolonial. The book starts by addressing the place Lamming's work occupies both within postcolonial writing at large and specifically within Caribbean literature. Subsequent chapters provide close textual readings of Lamming's six novels, paired in terms of their foregrounding of issues of race, gender and class. Despite a clear shift in Lamming's thematic focus on the rewriting of Caliban's project, with his last novel offering a basis for a re-imagining of the post/colonial encounter, there remains a perturbing inability to relinquish the privileged stance afforded the postcolonial intellectual in self-imposed exile (cultural, much more than geographical). 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