<p>"This is tour de force Marxist literary analysis, reading aesthetic form in relation to global economic transformation with both world-systemic foundations and local specificity. Waller links transformations in literary form in Mozambique and Angola to the passage from colonial capitalism to postcolonial socialism to neoliberalism; makes a case for world-systemic method as a mode of investigation with roots in the economic history of southern Africa; and revives “registration” as a key term in Marxist analysis of literature, as texts figure social reality in aesthetic forms that always exceed mere reflection. It is a rare work of scholarship that can unify historicized theory, rigorous method, and meticulous literary analysis—Genres of Transition does it. It has changed the way I think about how to study literature." Professor Sarah Brouillette, Carleton University</p>

<p>"Attentive to detail and boldly capacious in its world-systemic approach, Thomas Waller’s Genres of Transition brings the literatures of Mozambique and Angola to bear on central debates in literary criticism today. It is an impressive piece of scholarship: meticulously researched and argued with nuance, we encounter here a significant new voice in comparative postcolonial studies." Professor Stefan Helgesson, Stockholm University</p>

This book argues that literary production in Portuguese-speaking southern Africa has developed distinctive aesthetic idioms that critically respond to crises of global capitalism and related failures of post-colonial governance. Drawing from recent research at the intersection of world-systems analysis and materialist theories of world literature, it identifies and evaluates two generic trends in the post-independence literatures of Mozambique and Angola. From the mid-1980s to the early 1990s, there is a marked tendency in Mozambican literary production towards fictional representations of ghosts, spectral effects and gothic narrative techniques. In Angola, there is an analogous outburst of literary expression from the mid-1990s onwards, in which writers increasingly turn towards dystopian images of apocalypse, ecological crisis, and the disintegration of existing modes of social reproduction. Away from a restricted focus on the decline of the post-independence Marxist-Leninist state, the book contends that the upswing in these two genres of writing functions to critically register a world-systemic horizon that both surpasses and includes locally determined, national realities. The patterned repetition of spectral and dystopian forms in Portuguese-speaking southern Africa occurred at a time of heightened capitalisation, in which the region was subjected to newly expropriative forms of accumulation and ecological enclosure via integration into a reconstellated world-system headed by neoliberal finance capital. Through close readings of texts by authors such as Mia Couto, Suleiman Cassamo, Ungulani Ba Ka Khosa, Pepetela, and Ondjaki, this book asks: What factors drove literary production towards the figure of the spectre in Mozambique and towards dystopia in Angola? What emerging energies and social contradictions found shape in these generic idioms in ways that existing vocabularies were unable to express? What does the geo-temporal passage from spectrality to dystopia tell us about the history of capitalist development in southern Africa, and about the restructuring of political-economic parameters across the globe?

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Through close readings of texts by authors such as Mia Couto, Suleiman Cassamo, Ungulani Ba Ka Khosa, Pepetela, and Ondjaki, this book asks: What factors drove literary production towards the figure of the spectre in Mozambique and towards dystopia in Angola?
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  1. The Southern African World-System

  2. Irrealism in the Balance

  3. Spectres of Blood and Fire

  4. Luanda Syndrome

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781835533994
Publisert
2024-08-02
Utgiver
Liverpool University Press; Liverpool University Press
Høyde
239 mm
Bredde
163 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Thomas Waller is a Government of Ireland Postdoctoral Fellow in the School of English, Drama and Film at University College Dublin.