Multilingual Locals and Significant Geographies: For a Ground-up and Located Approach to World Literature

Karima Laachir, Sara Marzagora, Francesca Orsini

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    �World literature� has been much theorized and re-theorized in recent years as comparative literature for the globalized age. As it moves out of the Euro-American �core� of earlier comparative literature, it embraces those of us who work on Asian, Middle Eastern and African literatures, spurring us on to participate in this broader conversation and engage more directly and explicitly with the categories and models that underpin world literature.1 Yet its theoretical approaches based on world-system theory, diffusion and circulation, its geographical meta-categories such as �world� and �global�, and its linear and teleological historical narratives that inevitably begin with Goethe all seem to imprison non-Western literatures in categories, timelines and explanations that do not fit, rather than genuinely interrogate them.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1-8
    JournalModern Languages Open
    Volume1
    Issue number19
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2018

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Multilingual Locals and Significant Geographies: For a Ground-up and Located Approach to World Literature'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this