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Postcolonial Servitude: Domestic Servants in Global South Asian English Literature

Autor Ambreen Hai
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 19 iun 2024
Postcolonial Servitude explores how a new generation of contemporary global, transnational, award-winning writers with origins in India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, and Bangladesh engages with the complexities of domestic servitude as a problem for the nation and for the novel. Servitude, to be distinguished from slavery, is a distinctive and pervasive phenomenon in South Asia, with a long history. Unprotected by labor laws, subject to exploitation and dehumanization, members of the lower classes provide essential services to employers whose homes become the servants' workplace. South Asian literature has always featured servants, usually as marginal or instrumental. This book focuses on writers who make servants and servitude central, and craft new narrative forms to achieve their goals. Identifying a blind spot in contemporary postcolonial studies, this is the first full-length study to focus on domestic servants in Anglophone postcolonial or South Asian literature and to examine their political, thematic, and formal significance.Offering fresh readings of well-known early to mid-20th-century writers, this book shows how South Asian English fiction conventionally keeps servants in the background, peripheral but necessary to the constitution of an elite or middle class. It analyses closely the formal strategies, interventions, and modes of representation of five younger writers (Daniyal Mueenuddin, Romesh Gunesekera, Aravind Adiga, Thrity Umrigar, and Kiran Desai), who, it argues, pull servants and servitude into the foreground, humanizing servants as protagonists with agency, complex subjectivities, and stories of their own. Postcolonial Servitude reveals a cultural shift in the twenty-first century postcolonial novel, a new attentiveness, self-implication, and ethics, linked with a new poetics.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780197698006
ISBN-10: 019769800X
Pagini: 416
Dimensiuni: 150 x 213 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.73 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Recenzii

In this examination of the ubiquitous figure of the domestic servant in South Asian fiction spanning the twentieth and twenty-first century, Hai illuminates the politics and aesthetics of representation with insight, rigor and compassion. This book will forever transform our understanding of the complexities of servitude fiction.
Through a series of engaging close readings of texts by a new generation of transnational South Asian writers, Hai identifies a dynamic genre of writing that she labels 'servitude fiction.' Unlike the ubiquitous but marginal figure of the servant in early to late twentieth-century fiction this new genre centers the servant, emphasizes the interiority of the servant, and critiques servitude as a system. Servitude fiction may well pave the way for progressive social reform of an institution that has for too long escaped our scrutiny. Hai's book is a welcome, necessary and timely window on this world.
We have long needed a sensitive account of domestic servitude and its imbrication with the inadequately realized promise of decolonization. Postcolonial Servitude delivers that as well as a theorization of the violent structuring of intimacy in postcolonial life, while it makes a case for the capacity of fiction to reveal the complexities of these social relations at the same time as it performs the ability of criticism to deepen our understanding.
Using theories of "contact" and "who speaks for whom" by Linda Alcoff, Hai presents an intersectional feminist reading of the nuanced relationships between servants and their employers, gender, faith, and age playing into the drama. Hai's statement in her discussion of Rushdie about the "effect of servitude on human relationships, bodies, and psyches" sums up the tenor of this critical volume. Recommended. Advanced undergraduates through faculty.

Notă biografică

Ambreen Hai is Andrew W. Mellon Professor in the Humanities, Professor and Chair of English Language and Literature, and Director of South Asian Studies at Smith College. She is affiliated faculty in the program in the Study of Women and Gender. Specializing in Anglophone postcolonial literature from South Asia, Africa and the Caribbean, and 19th-20th century literature of the British Empire, she has published widely on postcolonial and transnational writing, with a focus on South Asia and its diaspora.