1st Edition

Beyond the Black Atlantic Relocating Modernization and Technology

Edited By Walter Goebel, Saskia Schabio Copyright 2006
224 Pages
by Routledge

224 Pages
by Routledge

224 Pages
by Routledge

Debates about the ‘Black Atlantic’ have alerted us to an experience of modernization that diverges from the dominant Western narratives of globalization and technological progress. This outstanding volume expands the concept of the Black Atlantic by reaching beyond the usual African-American focus of the field, presenting fresh perspectives on postcolonial experiences of technology and... Read more

Acknowledgements  Introduction  Negotiating African Modernities  The Presence of the Past in Peripheral Modernities.  Black Modernity, Nationalism and Transnationalism: The Challenge of Black South African Poetry.  Failure to Connect – Resistant Modernities at National Crossroads: Solomon Plaatje and Mohandas Gandhi.  Township Modernism  Caribbean (in)Versions of Modernity.  Ulysses and the Shape-Shifter: Caribbean Modernity in Pauline Melville’s Writings.  V.S. Naipaul: The Limitations of Transnationalism and Technological Progress.  Colonial Creations of the West  The Technology of Publicity in the Atlantic Semi-Peripheries: Benjamin Franklin, Modernity, and the Nigerian Slave Trade.  Spectrality’s Secret Sharers: Occultism as (Post)Colonial Affect.  Peripheral Interpretations of Technology.  Transitionality at Home and Abroad: Some Examples from India and its Virtual Diaspora.  Technologies in Hanif Kureishi’s ‘The Body’.  Travels in Technotopia: Modernization and Technology in Postcolonial Utopian and Dystopian Writing

Biography

Walter Goebel, Saskia Schabio

'This is both an intellectually serious book and an informative one. The depth of its many arguments give real teeth to its claim of revisiting peripheral modernity – both as an important sign of value separating the "West" from its former colonies, and as a deeply detailed and tactile set of real-life situations, literary texts, and still-developing social settings. The book is much, much more informed, analytically sharp, factually substantial, and generously outward-looking than anything of its type.'  - Timothy Brennan, University of Minnesota, USA

'This book performs a vital role in challenging and developing the ideas surrounding, and emerging from, Paul Gilroy's The Black Atlantic. From its opening, it establishes itself as an important volume for postcolonial and literary studies, but also, more broadly, for understading the global impact of modernity and modernization' - Sarah Dauncey, Journal of American Studies