In Stereotype: South Asia in the Global Literary Imaginary

In Stereotype: South Asia in the Global Literary Imaginary

by Mrinalini Chakravorty
In Stereotype: South Asia in the Global Literary Imaginary

In Stereotype: South Asia in the Global Literary Imaginary

by Mrinalini Chakravorty

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Overview

In Stereotype confronts the importance of cultural stereotypes in shaping the ethics and reach of global literature. Mrinalini Chakravorty focuses on the seductive force and explanatory power of stereotypes in multiple South Asian contexts, whether depicting hunger, crowdedness, filth, slums, death, migrant flight, terror, or outsourcing. She argues that such commonplaces are crucial to defining cultural identity in contemporary literature and shows how the stereotype's ambivalent nature exposes the crises of liberal development in South Asia.

In Stereotype considers the influential work of Salman Rushdie, Aravind Adiga, Michael Ondaatje, Monica Ali, Mohsin Hamid, and Chetan Bhagat, among others, to illustrate how stereotypes about South Asia provide insight into the material and psychic investments of contemporary imaginative texts: the colonial novel, the transnational film, and the international best-seller. Probing circumstances that range from the independence of the Indian subcontinent to poverty tourism, civil war, migration, domestic labor, and terrorist radicalism, Chakravorty builds an interpretive lens for reading literary representations of cultural and global difference. In the process, she also reevaluates the fascination with transnational novels and films that manufacture global differences by staging intersubjective encounters between cultures through stereotypes.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780231165969
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Publication date: 09/02/2014
Series: Literature Now
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 336
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.30(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Mrinalini Chakravorty is associate professor of English at the University of Virginia and concentrates on postcolonial literature and film; studies of race, gender, and sexuality; and cultural studies. She is particularly interested in the theoretical intersections among these areas, including but not limited to transnational approaches to the study of literary culture, aesthetic responses to globalization, and modes of minority discourse. She is the author of several articles that have appeared in differences, PMLA, Ariel, and Modern Fiction Studies, as well as other journals and collections.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Prologue: Stereotypes as Provocation
1. Why the Stereotype? Why South Asia?
2. To Understand Me, You'll Have to Swallow a World: Margins, Multitudes, and the Nation in Salman Rushdie's Midnight's Children
3. Slumdog or White Tiger? The Abjection and Allure of Slums
4. The Dead That Haunt Anil's Ghost: Subaltern Stereotypes and Postcolonial Melancholia
5. From Bangladesh to Brick Lane: The Biocultural Stereotypes of Migrancy
6. Good and Bad Transnationalisms: Outsourcing and Terror
Epilogue: The Afterlife of Stereotypes
Notes
Bibliography
Index

What People are Saying About This

Gauri Viswanathan

In Stereotype is a bold, innovative book that takes its readers far beyond typical understandings of stereotypes as biased, ungrounded assumptions about others. Instead, Mrinalini Chakravorty locates the stereotype's staying power in the production of new forms of intersubjective relationships. She adroitly spotlights global fiction to illustrate the formative influence of stereotypes in creating cultural boundaries between communities and therefore producing cultural difference itself.

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