Connecting Cultures

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African literature analysis
Alexandra Fuller
Ars Erotica
brodber
Category=JBCC
creole
cultural hybridity
DSR.
Early Indian Nationalism
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erna
Erna Brodber
farmer
Hereford Mappa Mundi
Hindi Cinema
Home Town
Indian diaspora narratives
Indian Identity
Indian Popular Cinema
Kama Shastra Society
Kama Sutra
Larger Nationalism
literature
Mandela
mpe
Nelson Mandela
North American Forms
phaswane
Pisanus Fraxi
post-apartheid
Post-apartheid Community
post-Apartheid identity politics
Post-apartheid Literature
postcolonial studies
pre-Castro Cuba
transnational migration
Vice Versa
West Indian women writers
white
White Creole Women
Young Men
zimbabwean
Zimbabwean Asylum Seekers
Zimbabwean Farm

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415494977
  • Weight: 350g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Mar 2009
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This lively and incisive collection of essays from an international group of scholars explores the interactions between cultures originating in Africa, India, the Caribbean, and Europe. Those interactions have been both destructive and richly productive, and the consequences continue to 'trouble the living stream' today. Several of the essays focus on the continuing reverberations of political and cultural conflicts in post-Apartheid Southern Africa, including the presence in Britain of Zimbabwean asylum seekers. Other authors discuss the ways in which Indian culture has transformed novelistic and cinematic forms. A third group of essays examines the attempts of West Indian women writers to reclaim their territory and describe it in their own terms. The collection as a whole is framed by essays which deal with discourses of 'terror' and 'terrorism' and how we translate and read them in the wake of 9/11.

This book was previously published as a special issue of Third World Quarterly.

Emma Bainbridge is currently working at the University of Kent. She was the Conference  Secretary for the Connecting Cultures conference in April 2004.