Postcolonial Disaster: Narrating Catastrophe in the Twenty-First Century

Author:   Pallavi Rastogi
Publisher:   Northwestern University Press
ISBN:  

9780810141735


Pages:   312
Publication Date:   30 April 2020
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Postcolonial Disaster: Narrating Catastrophe in the Twenty-First Century


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Author:   Pallavi Rastogi
Publisher:   Northwestern University Press
Imprint:   Northwestern University Press
Weight:   0.560kg
ISBN:  

9780810141735


ISBN 10:   0810141736
Pages:   312
Publication Date:   30 April 2020
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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Reviews

Articulating a persuasive theory of the disaster unconscious, Pallavi Rastogi's narratology of postcolonial disaster fiction highlights the ways in which literary texts attempt to redress disasters on both aesthetic and pedagogical registers. Through a set of close readings that revivify some of the foundational concerns of postcolonial theory--including the centrality of the nation-state--this book at the same time retools postcolonial studies to address newly emerging challenges. A must-read. --Gaurav Desai, author of Commerce with the Universe: Africa, India and the Afrasian Imagination As climate change deepens planetary compound crises--of unstable markets, poor crop yields, new pandemics, and refugee displacement--this book's examination of time, narrative, and disaster will remain essential reading for years to come. --Treasa De Loughry, Wasafiri Disaster fiction, in Rastogi's impressive and commanding analysis, is not a sensationalist thrill ride, but a surprising route to the core concerns of anticolonial art and politics. --Liam O'Loughlin, Journal of Postcolonial Writing Postcolonial Disaster . . . engages with and articulates contemporary forms of the originary concerns of postcolonial theory, and pushes back on mostly accepted ideas of canon formation. Truly a book for our times. --Meghan Gorman-DaRif, South Asian Review Rastogi's . . . focus on the pedagogical aspect of disaster stories . . . is particularly compelling in our current disaster ridden historical moment. Postcolonial Disaster teaches us how to read such stories--and especially their fictional counterparts--as aesthetic objects and as crucial tools for future survival. As much as scholars of postcolonial literature, disaster, trauma, narratology, and environmental humanities (among others) will find Rastogi's text instructive, so might the casual reader of contemporary fiction. As timely as Rastogi's book is now, it promises only to become more so as we push forward into an increasingly climate-changing world. --Carolyn Ownbey, Safundi: The Journal of South African and American Studies Pallavi Rastogi reanimates the core concerns of postcolonial studies about social and political justice by outlining a disaster unconscious of twenty-first century literature from Southern Africa and South Asia. Rastogi shows how old questions are new again as the many disasters of the twenty-first century--from nuclear war to AIDS to economic collapse to earthquakes and tsunamis--entail an urgent rethinking of crisis, catastrophe, narrative, and healing. --Yogita Goyal, author of Romance, Diaspora, and Black Atlantic Literature


Articulating a persuasive theory of the disaster unconscious, Pallavi Rastogi's narratology of postcolonial disaster fiction highlights the ways in which literary texts attempt to redress disasters on both aesthetic and pedagogical registers. Through a set of close readings that revivify some of the foundational concerns of postcolonial theory--including the centrality of the nation-state--this book at the same time retools postcolonial studies to address newly emerging challenges. A must-read. --Gaurav Desai, author of Commerce with the Universe: Africa, India and the Afrasian Imagination As climate change deepens planetary compound crises--of unstable markets, poor crop yields, new pandemics, and refugee displacement--this book's examination of time, narrative, and disaster will remain essential reading for years to come. --Treasa De Loughry, Wasafiri Disaster fiction, in Rastogi's impressive and commanding analysis, is not a sensationalist thrill ride, but a surprising route to the core concerns of anticolonial art and politics. --Liam O'Loughlin, Journal of Postcolonial Writing Postcolonial Disaster . . . engages with and articulates contemporary forms of the originary concerns of postcolonial theory, and pushes back on mostly accepted ideas of canon formation. Truly a book for our times. --Meghan Gorman-DaRif, South Asian Review Pallavi Rastogi reanimates the core concerns of postcolonial studies about social and political justice by outlining a disaster unconscious of twenty-first century literature from Southern Africa and South Asia. Rastogi shows how old questions are new again as the many disasters of the twenty-first century--from nuclear war to AIDS to economic collapse to earthquakes and tsunamis--entail an urgent rethinking of crisis, catastrophe, narrative, and healing. --Yogita Goyal, author of Romance, Diaspora, and Black Atlantic Literature


"""Articulating a persuasive theory of the disaster unconscious, Pallavi Rastogi's narratology of postcolonial disaster fiction highlights the ways in which literary texts attempt to redress disasters on both aesthetic and pedagogical registers. Through a set of close readings that revivify some of the foundational concerns of postcolonial theory--including the centrality of the nation-state--this book at the same time retools postcolonial studies to address newly emerging challenges. A must-read."" --Gaurav Desai, author of Commerce with the Universe: Africa, India and the Afrasian Imagination ""As climate change deepens planetary compound crises--of unstable markets, poor crop yields, new pandemics, and refugee displacement--this book's examination of time, narrative, and disaster will remain essential reading for years to come."" --Treasa De Loughry, Wasafiri ""Disaster fiction, in Rastogi's impressive and commanding analysis, is not a sensationalist thrill ride, but a surprising route to the core concerns of anticolonial art and politics."" --Liam O'Loughlin, Journal of Postcolonial Writing ""Postcolonial Disaster . . . engages with and articulates contemporary forms of the originary concerns of postcolonial theory, and pushes back on mostly accepted ideas of canon formation. Truly a book for our times."" --Meghan Gorman-DaRif, South Asian Review ""Rastogi's . . . focus on the pedagogical aspect of disaster stories . . . is particularly compelling in our current disaster ridden historical moment. Postcolonial Disaster teaches us how to read such stories--and especially their fictional counterparts--as aesthetic objects and as crucial tools for future survival. As much as scholars of postcolonial literature, disaster, trauma, narratology, and environmental humanities (among others) will find Rastogi's text instructive, so might the casual reader of contemporary fiction. As timely as Rastogi's book is now, it promises only to become more so as we push forward into an increasingly climate-changing world."" --Carolyn Ownbey, Safundi: The Journal of South African and American Studies ""Pallavi Rastogi reanimates the core concerns of postcolonial studies about social and political justice by outlining a disaster unconscious of twenty-first century literature from Southern Africa and South Asia. Rastogi shows how old questions are new again as the many disasters of the twenty-first century--from nuclear war to AIDS to economic collapse to earthquakes and tsunamis--entail an urgent rethinking of crisis, catastrophe, narrative, and healing."" --Yogita Goyal, author of Romance, Diaspora, and Black Atlantic Literature"


Author Information

Pallavi Rastogi is an associate professor of English at Louisiana State University. She is the author of Afrindian Fictions: Diaspora, Race, and National Desire in South Africa.

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