Hunger and Postcolonial Writing explores contemporary postcolonial fiction and life-writing from various geo-political contexts.
The focus of this work is hunger; individuated in the self-imposed starvation of the hunger protester, and on a mass scale in the form of famine and food insecurity. It considers the hungry colonial and postcolonial body, examines its textual forms and historical trajectories, and situates it within the food security context of imperialism and its legacies. This book is the first monograph-length study of hunger within a postcolonial/world literary context. Its transcolonial focus produces comparative readings across postcolonial writings, facilitating productive analyses of the operations of imperialism and its aftereffects across heterogenous zones of colonialism. This project reads hunger as defined by the social, cultural, historical, and economic engagements produced by colonial and postcolonial encounters. Examining the starving colonialized body through Cartesian models of somatic subjectivity, and considering how this body is mediated by post-Enlightenment discourses of Modernity and progress, this work interrogates the contradictions produced by the starving colonial body as it is positioned between the possibility of radical protest and prescriptive colonial discourse.
This book will be of interest to Gastrocritical and Postcolonial scholars and students, and to Food scholars more broadly.
Author(s): Muzna Rahman
Series: Critical Food Studies
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 192
City: London
Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Table of
Contents
Acknowledgements
1. Introduction – (Post)colonialism, Hunger, and the Body
2. (Post)colonial Foodways and Transhistorical Hungers in Kiran Desai’s The Inheritance of Loss
3. The Text, Starving Body, and J.M. Coetzee’s Life & Times of Michael K
4. Anorexic Fictions and Starving Histories in Tsitsi Dangarembga’s Nervous Conditions
5. Traumatic National Hungers and the Starving Irish Body: Bobby Sands’ 1981 Hunger Strike
Index