The history of the modern riot parallels the development of the modern novel and the modern lyric. Yet there has been no sustained attempt to trace or theorize the various ways writers over time and in different contexts have shaped cultural perceptions of the riot as a distinctive form of political and social expression. Through a focus on questions of voice, massing, and mediation, this collection is the first cross-cultural study of the interrelatedness of a prevalent mode of political and economic protest and the variable styles of writing that riots inspired. This volume will provide historical depth and cultural nuance, as well as examine more recent theoretical attempts to understand the resurgence of rioting in a time of unprecedented global uncertainty. One of the key contentions of this collection is that literature has done more than merely record riotous practices. Rather literature has, in variable ways, used them as raw material to stimulate and accelerate its own formal development and critical responsiveness. For some writers this has manifested in a move away from classical norms of propriety and accord, and toward a more openly contingent, chaotic, and unpredictable scenography and cast of dramatis personae, while others have moved towards narrative realism or, more recently, digital media platforms to manifest the crises that riots unleash. Keenly attuned to these formal variations, the essays in this collection analyse literature's fraught dialogue with the histories of violence that are bound up in the riot as an inherently volatile form of collective action.
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The history of the modern riot parallels the development of the modern novel, and writers have collectively shaped perceptions of the riot as a form of political and social expression. The essays in this volume analyse literature's dialogue with the histories of violence bound up in the riot as an inherently volatile form of collective action.
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Acknowledgements
List of Figures and Illustrations
Jumana Bayeh, Helen Groth, and Julian Murphet: Introduction: Writing and Rioting: Literature in Times of Crisis
1: Ian Haywood: Tumultum Populi: Riots, Noise, and Speech Acts in Georgian England
2: Mark Steven: I Would They Were Barbarians: Shakespeare, Brecht, and the Global Riot
3: Helen Groth: Bloody Sundays: Radical Rewriting and the Trafalgar Riot of 1887
4: Cóilín Parsons: Rhodes Must Fall, Ulysses, and the Politics of Teaching Modernism
5: J. Daniel Elam: Buzz, Crowd, Life: Writing the Riot in Mulk Raj Anand's Untouchable and Virginia Woolf's Mrs Dalloway
6: Rashmi Varma: Riotous Nations: Time and the Short Story of Partition
7: Joseph North: A Sketch of the Mob
8: Janny H. C. Leung: Phantom Justice and Orwellian Violence: Writing Against Erasure in a Turbulent Hong Kong
9: Julian Murphet: The Crowd in this Moment: Troubling the Immanence of Riots in US Literature
10: Andrew Brooks and Astrid Lorange: 'If I write a Love poem it's against the police': The Abolitionist Poetics of the Riot
11: Karima Laachir: Mobilizing the History of Protest and Dissent in Post-2011 Moroccan Novels
12: Caroline Rooney: From 'Jihadi City' to 'Bride of the Revolution': The Protest of Tripoli
13: Rita Sakr: Taming 'the Square': Documenting the Rioting Subject in Basma Abdel Aziz's The Queue
14: Jumana Bayeh: Mediating the Arab Spring's Riots: Reclaiming Egypt's Lost Archive
Index
Selected Bibliography
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Jumana Bayeh is Senior Lecturer at Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia. She is the author of The Literature of the Lebanese Diaspora (2015) and several articles on Arab diaspora fiction. She co-edited Democracy, Diaspora, Territory: Europe and Cross-Border Politics (2020), as well as a special issue on "Arabs in Australia" in Mashriq & Mahjar. She is working on two research projects, one that examines the
representation of the nation-state in Arab diaspora literature from writers based in Australia, North America, and the United Kingdom, and another collaborative project looking at the global resurgence of riots. Helen Groth is Professor of English in the
School of Arts and Media, University of New South Wales. She is the author of Victorian Photography and Literary Nostalgia (OUP, 2004), Moving Images: Nineteenth-Century Reading and Screen Practices (2013), and co-author of Dreams and Modernity: A Cultural History (2013). She is the co-editor of a number of books and special journal issues, most recently Sounding Modernism: Rhythm and Sonic Mediation in Modern Literature and Film (2017), and The
Edinburgh Companion to Literary Sound Studies (2023). Julian Murphet is Jury Chair of English Language and Literature at the University of Adelaide. Prior to that he was Scientia Professor of English and Film Studies at UNSW, Sydney. He has
published widely in the fields of modern and contemporary literature, literary theory, film studies, race, and other areas of critical inquiry. Forthcoming books include Modern Character: 1890-1905, Prison Writing in the Twentieth Century: A Literary History, and the Edinburgh Companion to Literature and Sound Studies, also edited with Helen Groth.
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Literary scholars from across the world examine literature's historical engagements with rioting as a volatile form of collective action
The case studies included deploy a range of critical approaches and trace a long historical arc from Shakespeare through the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, to contemporary works by writers working in Morocco, Lebanon, Egypt, Hong Kong, South Africa, Ireland, Australia, Europe, and America
The writers discussed have not merely documented riots, but have developed diverse ways of writing them, that attend to the expressive nature of rioting
Addresses a significant gap in existing scholarship on riots which has made only selective and illustrative use of literature or bypassed it completely
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780192862594
Publisert
2023
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
626 gr
Høyde
140 mm
Bredde
163 mm
Dybde
30 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
288