This study traces the shaping presence of cultural interactions, arguing that American literature has become a hybridization of Eastern and Western literary traditions. Cultural exchanges between the East and West began in the early decades of the nineteenth century as American transcendentalists explored Eastern philosophies and arts. Hakutani examines this influence through the works of Emerson, Thoreau, and Whitman. He further demonstrates the East-West exchange through discussions of the interactions by modernists such as Yone Noguchi, Yeats, Pound, Camus, and Kerouac. Finally, he argues that African American literature, represented by Richard Wright, Ralph Ellison, Alice Walker, Toni Morrison, and James Emanuel, is postmodern. Their works exhibit their concerted efforts to abolish marginality and extend referentiality, exemplifying the postmodern East-West crossroads of cultures. A fuller understanding of their work is gained by situating them within this cultural conversation. The writings of Wright, for example, take on their full significance only when they are read, not as part of a national literature, but as an index to an evolving literature of cultural exchanges.
Daring, extravagant, comical and humane, this book renews Rushdie's stature as a storyteller who can enthrall and instruct us with the same sentence.
For the first time in history, the majority of the global population lives in cities. Changes to patterns of work, leisure, production, ... Time, Literature, and Cartography after the Spatial Turn: The Chronometric Imaginary.
In The Pluralist Imagination from East to West in American Literature, Julianne Newmark brings urban northeastern, western, southwestern, and Native American literature into debates about pluralism and national belonging and thereby ...
In this collection of twenty-one personal essays, Andrew Lam, the award-winning author of Perfume Dreams, continues to explore the Vietnamese diaspora, this time concentrating not only on how the East and West have changed but how they are ...
... shadows of gunmen ' . Christopher Murray reads Davoren as a modernist anti - hero.23 I read O'Casey's trilogy as modernist Brechtian alienation of the official nation- alist worldview , and a call to return to the true underlying ideals ...
Singing Simpkin and Other Bawdy Jigs: Musical Comedy on the Shakespearean Stage. Exeter: University of Exeter Press, 2014. Criveller, Gianni, and Cesér Guillen Nuñez. Portrait of a Jesuit: Matteo Ricci. Macao: Macau Ricci Institute, ...
... Geronimo's language of calling U.S. and Mexican oppressors “white eyes,” without impli- cating himself in the moral failing. Nevertheless, the petro-complicity that I have been discussing regarding park visitors with their paperwork ...
Mohaghegh tracks the idea of 'chaos' into the contemporary philosophical and cultural imagination of the postcolonial world, exploring its vital role in the formation of an emergent avant-garde literature in the Middle East, concentrating ...
Profiling individual, legendary authors, best-selling author Jerry Hopkins combines his research and his own experiences as a longtime expatriate with an intimate knowledge of Asia and offers us a unique perspective on the impact of Eastern ...
... West Literary Imagination: Cultural Exchanges from Yeats to Morrison. The latter two titles contain chapters that ... East-West Literary Imagination (2017, 18). He notes in the introduction to this book, however, that Wright followed a 5 ...