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E-grāmata: Fractured Narratives and Pandemic Identities: COVID-19, the (Post)Apocalyptic, the Dystopic, and the Postcolonial

Edited by (Om Prakash Dwivedi is Assistant Professor in English at Shri Ramswaroop Memorial University, Lucknow, India), Edited by
  • Formāts: 138 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Aug-2024
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040119525
  • Formāts - EPUB+DRM
  • Cena: 62,60 €*
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  • Formāts: 138 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Aug-2024
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040119525

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The book considers how identities have become more fractured since COVID-19, by thinking of COVID-19 in relation to other crises (economic, social, digital, and ecological) and by drawing parallels to literature, cinema, and visual art.

COVID-19 was a type of apocalypse, a catastrophic destructive event that produced dystopian measures in its wake and drew uncanny parallels to dystopic works of literature and speculative fiction. Yet the pandemic was apocalyptic in another sense too. The word apocalypse derives from apokalupsis, which means disclosure or uncovering. In this way, COVID-19 also revealed the dystopian processes already at work in the world, including digital forms of surveillance as well as the asymmetries within populations and divides in health outcomes between the Global North and Global South. Indeed, societies that have experienced the horrors of settler colonialism have already survived apocalypses. COVID-19 serves then as a premonition for our climate emergency as well as an echo of other apocalyptic situations, both real and imagined. This book consists of essays from acclaimed theorists and scholars writing amid the pandemic and exposes the asymmetries of our divided world. The volume will be indispensable for scholars and researchers of literature, postcolonial studies, cultural studies, and comparative literature including post-apocalyptic and speculative fiction.

The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Journal of Postcolonial Writing and are accompanied by a new afterword.



The book considers how identities have become more fractured since COVID-19, by thinking of COVID-19 in relation to other crises (economic, social, digital, and ecological) and by drawing parallels to literature, cinema, and visual art.

Introduction - Living in dystopia: Fractured identities and COVID-19
1.
Pandemic: Invisibility and silence
2. Thinking the delirious pandemic
governance by numbers with Samit Basus Chosen Spirits and Prayaag Akbars
Leila
3. Infection rebellion in Bina Shahs Before She Sleeps
4. The Adivasi
and the undead: From (post)colonial carnage to Necrocene apocalypse in Betaal
(2020)
5. Septopia and the wastialized Other: Allegorizing neo-liberalism in
the age of COVID-19
6. Fragmentations, phantom limbs, re-memberings:
Negotiating bodies, representation, and subjectivity in Caribbean British
writing
7. Flattening the curse: Cooling down with Zadie Smiths Intimations
8. The art of COVID-19 Afterword - COVID-19 and the other virus
Om Prakash Dwivedi is Associate Professor of English Literature at Bennett University, India. He is the author of Representations of Precarity in South Asian Literature in English (2022); Re-Orientalism and Indian Writing in English (2014) and Tracing the New Indian Diaspora (2014). His latest publication includes a special issue of The Journal of Commonwealth Literature on "Partition: 75 Years On", and a special issue of Metacritic Journal on "Hope and Utopia in Global South Literature" He is the Vice Chair of the international research group, Challenging Precarity (UK)

Aleks Wansbrough is a Writer and Cultural Theorist. The author of Capitalism and the Enchanted Screen: Myths and Allegories in the Digital Age (2021), his current research concerns ideological analyses of digital media and film. He is an editor of the Journal of Asia-Pacific Pop Culture published by Penn State University Press.