Considered one of Africa's most innovative and subversive writers, the
Zimbabwean novelist, poet, playwright and essayist Dambudzo Marechera
is read today as a significant voice in contemporary world literature.
Marechera wrote ceaselessly against the status quo, against
unqualified ideas, against expectation. He was an intellectual
outsider who found comfort only in the company of other free-thinking
writers - Shelley, Bakhtin, Apuleius, Fanon, Dostoyevsky, Tutuola. It
is this universe of literary thought that one can see written into the
fiction of Marechera that this collection of essays sets out to
interrogate.
In this important and timely contribution to African literarystudies,
Grant Hamilton has gathered together essays of world-renowned,
established, and young academics from Africa, Europe, Asia and
Australia in order to discuss the important literary and philosophical
influences that course through Marechera's prose, poetry and drama.
From classical allusion to the political philosophy of anarchism, this
collection of new research on Marechera's work makes clear the
extraordinary breadth and quality of thought that Marechera brought to
his writing.
Grant Hamilton is Assistant Professor of English Literature at the
Chinese University of Hong Kong. He is the author of _On
Representation: Deleuze and Coetzee on the Colonized Subject_ (Rodopi,
2011), as well as a number of articles on contemporary African,
postcolonial, and world literatures. He is currently working on his
second book, _Deleuze and African Literature_.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781782041030
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Ingram Publisher Services UK- Academic
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter