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OverviewArgues that African literature conceptualizes trauma and regeneration as a more-than-human process, offering an animist revision of psychoanalysis. Psychoanalytic trauma theory largely disregards African perspectives. Postcolonial criticism often filters these perspectives through a secular humanist lens. Examining how African literature uses animism to address the traumas of colonization, Animist Poetics offers a new understanding of the postcolonial condition. From an animist viewpoint, the self is not an individual but rather a regenerative process linking the living, the dead, and their ecosystems. Looking at poetry, fiction, drama, and visual art—including archival manuscripts by Wole Soyinka and Yvonne Vera—Ryan Topper argues that African literature reinvents these Indigenous ecologies in uniquely modern ways. Animist Poetics takes Indigenous—and literary—knowledge seriously, rethinking the foundations of psychoanalysis and charting new theoretical paths in posthumanism, the environmental humanities, new materialism, biopolitics, and memory studies. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Ryan Topper (Western Oregon University)Publisher: State University of New York Press Imprint: State University of New York Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 22.90cm ISBN: 9798855803273Pages: 296 Publication Date: 02 February 2026 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Introduction: African Literature's Animist Poetics 1. Ancestral Trauma and the Regenerative Death Drive: Toward an Animist Revision of Psychoanalysis 2. Animist Poetics' Realism-Ritual Spectrum: Aminatta Forna, Delia Jarrett-Macauley, Oswald Mbuyiseni Mtshali, Uhuru Portia Phalafala 3. Cosmic Personhood in the Animist Lyric: Reading Wole Soyinka's Prison Poetry with and against New Materialism 4. Animist Tragedy's Biopolitical Mediation: Staging Human Sacrifice in Wole Soyinka's Death and the King's Horseman 5. Multidimensional Memory: Environmental Wounds and the Architecture of Animism in Yvonne Vera's The Stone Virgins Conclusion: Principles of Animist Criticism Notes Works Cited IndexReviews""Ryan Topper has written an outstanding, field-defining book on trauma in African literature. Animist Poetics will serve as a model for reading foundational and new texts representing colonialism and its legacies, including the destruction of African ecologies."" — Evan Mwangi, author of The Postcolonial Animal: African Literature and Posthuman Ethics ""A timely and significant contribution to trauma studies, African studies, and ecocriticism, Animist Poetics traces the dialectical relation between the imposition of colonial violence and the emergence of novel and expansive social and political formations. Through nuanced readings, Ryan Topper shows how African literature provincializes Eurocentric and anthropocentric models of trauma and expands the concept of the postcolonial polis, activating a cosmology that joins human and nonhuman agents of the past, present, and future."" — Nicole M. Rizzuto, author of Insurgent Testimonies: Witnessing Colonial Trauma in Modern and Anglophone Literature Author InformationRyan Topper is Associate Professor of English at Western Oregon University and Research Fellow in English at Stellenbosch University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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