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Domestications: American Empire, Literary Culture, and the Postcolonial Lens
Northwestern University Press, 2018 eISBN: 978-0-8101-3751-6 | Paper: 978-0-8101-3749-3 | Cloth: 978-0-8101-3750-9 Library of Congress Classification PN56.I465A26 2018 Dewey Decimal Classification 809.933581
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ABOUT THIS BOOK
Domestications traces a genealogy of American global engagement with the Global South since World War II. Hosam Aboul-Ela reads American writers contrapuntally against intellectuals from the Global South in their common—yet ideologically divergent—concerns with hegemony, world domination, and uneven development. Using Edward Said’s Culture and Imperialism as a model, Aboul-Ela explores the nature of U.S. imperialism’s relationship to literary culture through an exploration of five key terms from the postcolonial bibliography: novel, idea, perspective, gender, and space. See other books on: Imperialism | Imperialism in literature | Literature, Modern | Middle Eastern | Postcolonialism in literature See other titles from Northwestern University Press |
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