This book demonstrates the epic genre’s enduring relevance to the Global South. It identifies a contemporary avatar of classical epic, the ‘postcolonial epic’, ushered in by Herman Melville’s Moby Dick, a foundational text of North America, and exemplified by Derek Walcott’s Caribbean masterpiece Omeros and Amitav Ghosh’s South Asian saga, the Ibis trilogy.
The work focuses on the epic genre’s rich potential to articulate postimperial concerns with nation and migration across the Global North/South divide. It foregrounds postcolonial developments in the genre including a shift from politics to political economy, subaltern reconfigurations of capitalist and imperial temporalities, and the poststructuralist preoccupation with language and representation. In addition to bringing to light hitherto unexamined North/South affiliations between Melville, Walcott and Ghosh, the book proposes a fresh approach to epic through the comparative concept of ‘political epic’, where an avowed national politics promoting a culture’s ‘pure’ origins coexists uneasily with a disavowed poetics of intertextual borrowing from ‘other’ cultures.
An important intervention in literary studies, this volume will interest scholars and researchers of postcolonial studies, especially South Asian and Caribbean literature, Global South studies, transnational studies and cultural studies.
Author(s): Sneharika Roy
Series: Literary Cultures of the Global South
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2018
Cover
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Series editors’ preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction: from classical to postcolonial epic
1 Rallying the tropes: the language of violence and the violence of language
2 ‘History in the future tense’: genealogy as prophecy
3 ‘The artifice of eternity’: ekphrasis as ‘an-other’ epic
4 Conclusion: resistant nostalgia
Bibliography
Index