âNotable for its recognition of the crucial, but often ignored, dialectical relationship between political economy and literary production, <i>Inter-imperiality</i> provides powerful examples of how a scholar can engage with one problematic across disciplines, using literary texts as an anchor. This big, bold book is a major intervention in continuing debates on the emergence of literature in relation to a world defined by the phenomenon of empires of time and space.â
- Simon Gikandi, author of, Slavery and the Culture of Taste
â[<i>Inter-imperiality</i>] offers a transhistorical, interdisciplinary, intersectional, and decolonial analysis of the fundamentally relational processes that constitute imperial powers and individual lives. Polities and persons alike are enmeshed in shifting entanglements that enable coercion and violence as well as care and community. Aiming to âhonor the struggles and the sustaining practicesâ that are elided when this existential interdependence is disavowed, Doyle chronicles a longue durĂ©e of dialectical state and identity (co)formation that spans the eleventh to the twentieth centuries.â
American Literature
â<i>Inter-imperiality </i>might be described as an attempt to reiterate the ontological insights of Hegel regarding the dialectical truth of our lived identity, extended and expanded through the <i>longue durĂ©e</i> of Braudel, but couched crucially in the terminology of feminist, Marxist, and postcolonial thought. It is a paean, among other things, to the untold history of female, non-Western labor. . . . There is a fervor and a seriousness to Doyleâs desire to expand and decenter contemporary global historiography, which is inspiring to read.â
- Ian Almond, Comparative Literature
âHow did European colonialism happen? Why is racism still permeating many quarters of life? How can we prevent the existence of colonialism and racism? <i>Inter-imperiality </i>innovatively engages these questions. . . . Doyleâs call for a return to the avowal of the materialist dialectic and for âcare, and cureâ presents inspiring new ways for thinking about the future of decolonial studies.â
- Lidan Lin, Modern Fiction Studies