Of Irony and Empire: Islam, the West, and the Transcultural Invention of Africa

Of Irony and Empire: Islam, the West, and the Transcultural Invention of Africa

by Laura Rice
Of Irony and Empire: Islam, the West, and the Transcultural Invention of Africa

Of Irony and Empire: Islam, the West, and the Transcultural Invention of Africa

by Laura Rice

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Overview

Of Irony and Empire is a dynamic, thorough examination of Muslim writers from former European colonies in Africa who have increasingly entered into critical conversations with the metropole. Focusing on the period between World War I and the present, "the age of irony," this book explores the political and symbolic invention of Muslim Africa and its often contradictory representations. Through a critical analysis of irony and resistance in works by writers who come from nomadic areas around the Sahara—Mustapha Tlili (Tunisia), Malika Mokeddem (Algeria), Cheikh Hamidou Kane (Senegal), and Tayeb Salih (Sudan)—Laura Rice offers a fresh perspective that accounts for both the influence of the Western, instrumental imaginary, and the Islamic, holistic one.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780791479520
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Publication date: 02/01/2012
Series: SUNY series, Explorations in Postcolonial Studies
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 251
File size: 519 KB

About the Author

Laura Rice is Professor of Comparative Literature at Oregon State University and cotranslator (with Karim Hamdy) of Century of Locusts by Malika Mokeddem and Departures by Isabelle Eberhardt.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

1. Prologue: Of Irony and Empire

2. African Conscripts/European Conflicts: Race, Memory, and the Lessons of War

3. Ambiguous Adventure: Reading Cheikh Hamidou Kane

4. Heimlich un-Heimlich: Of Home as Heterotopia in Salih, Tlili, and Mokeddem

5. Epilogue: The Ends of Irony

Notes
Bibliography
Index

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