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The Grammar of Identity

Transnational Fiction and the Nature of the Boundary

Stephen Clingman author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:8th Jan '09

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The Grammar of Identity cover

In our current world, questions of the transnational, location, land, and identity confront us with a particular insistence. The Grammar of Identity is a lively and wide-ranging study of twentieth-century fiction that examines how writers across nearly a hundred years have confronted these issues. Circumventing the divisions of conventional categories, the book examines writers from both the colonial and postcolonial, the modern and postmodern eras, putting together writers who might not normally inhabit the same critical space: Joseph Conrad, Caryl Phillips, Salman Rushdie, Charlotte Brontë, Jean Rhys, Anne Michaels, W. G. Sebald, Nadine Gordimer, and J. M. Coetzee. In this guise, the book itself becomes a journey of discovery, exploring the transnational not so much as a literal crossing of boundaries but as a way of being and seeing. In fictional terms this also means that it concerns a set of related forms: ways of approaching time and space; constructions of the self by way of combination and constellation; versions of navigation that at once have to do with the foundations of language as well as our pathways through the world. From Conrad's waterways of the earth, to Sebald's endless horizons of connection and accountability, to Gordimer's and Coetzee's meditations on the key sites of village, Empire, and desert, the book recovers the centrality of fiction to our understanding of the world. At the heart of it all is the grammar of identity, how we assemble and undertake our versions of self at the core of our forms of being and seeing.

a fine book ... insightful and evocative * Tina Steiner, Safundi, The Journal of South African and American Studies *
This is that rarity - a work of lucid high complexity... An assertion of unreleased developments of the self in relation to others, individual and collective, this is a work that sets one arguing with oneself. It is also an extraordinary work of literature, in itself, achieved with compelling beauty. * Nadine Gordimer *
A new, and challenging, thesis...creating a space for those of us who have hitherto been exotic "problems" or simply marginalised. By remapping the territory Clingman legitimizes a conversation above and beyond nationality and race and provides us with a home of some kind. Terrific work. * Caryl Phillips *
His book is, impressively and very topically, a reaffirmation of the importance of literary reading and therefore an implicit riposte to the infiltration of university departments of literature by the jargon and priorities of the corporate world. * Robert Spencer, Journal of Postcolonial Writing *

ISBN: 9780199278497

Dimensions: 223mm x 147mm x 22mm

Weight: 479g

282 pages