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Transnationalism in Southern African Literature by Stefan Helgesson

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Transnationalism in Southern African Literature

Modernists, Realists, and the Inequality of Print Culture

Stefan Helgesson

Taylor and Francis · Print & ebook · August 21, 2008

Reading lane: African Literary Criticism

Considering the growing interest in South African Literature at the moment, this study looks at both the Anglophone literature of South Africa and the lusophone literature of Angola and Mozambique.

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At a Glance

Who It's For

Reading lane: African Literary Criticism and Caribbean & Latin American.Publisher: Taylor and Francis.

Book Details

Authors
Stefan Helgesson
Publisher
Taylor and Francis
Published
August 21, 2008
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
African Literary Criticism · Literary Criticism / Caribbean & Latin American
Reading lane
African Literary Criticism

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • Southern African History

About This Book

Considering the growing interest in South African Literature at the moment, this study looks at both the Anglophone literature of South Africa and the lusophone literature of Angola and Mozambique. Stefan Helgesson suggests that the prevalence of ¿colonial¿ languages such as English and Portuguese in ¿anticolonial¿ or ¿postcolonial¿ African Literature is primarily an effect of the print network. Helgesson aims to demystify the authority of English and Portuguese by stressing...

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Considering the growing interest in South African Literature at the moment, this study looks at both the Anglophone literature of South Africa and the lusophone literature of Angola and Mozambique. Stefan Helgesson suggests that the prevalence of ¿colonial¿ languages such as English and Portuguese in ¿anticolonial¿ or ¿postcolonial¿ African Literature is primarily an effect of the print network. Helgesson aims to demystify the authority of English and Portuguese by stressing the materiality of the print medium and emphasising the strong transnational and transcontinental vectors of southern African literature after the Second World War.

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