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Alternative Orientalisms in Latin America and Beyond Editor: Ignacio López-Calvo Date Of Publication: Apr 2007 Isbn13: 9781847181435 Isbn: 1-84718-143-0 Orientalism is widely known as the study of Eastern cultures by Western intellectuals. Yet most people would associate this term with scholars from France, England, Germany, and the United States. This book presents, along with new essays dealing with the United States, the Islamic world and the Far East, alternative views on Orientalism, this time also coming from Latin America and other regions. While still dealing, in some cases, with interpretations of the East by Western outsiders, the fact that the cultural production analyzed (as well as many of the critics) comes from an area, Latin America, that has also been affected by European and U.S. imperialism and colonialism brings new light to the traditionally negative connotations ascribed to the term. These essays reveal that, though prejudice and racism are still prevalent in many Orientalist aesthetic practices coming from Latin America and other world regions, the perspective can also be radically different. From this perspective, rather than constructing the Orient as the West’s alien and inferior other, the mirror image that appears in this book constitutes an attempt at understanding the Asian within us (within the Western world). The postcolonial approach of many of these essays is the theoretical framework that prevents (or, at least, tries to prevent) paternalistic or hegemonic representations of the Asian subject. As a result, the emphasis is often placed on transculturation, hybridity, liminality, double consciousness, and cultural identity. Ignacio López-Calvo is an Associate Professor of Latin American literature and literary theory at the University of North Texas. He is the author of four books on Latin American literature and culture: Written in Exile. Chilean Fiction from 1973-Present (Routledge, 2001); Religión y militarismo en la obra de Marcos Aguinis 1963-2000 (Mellen Press, 2002); “Trujillo and God”: Literary and Cultural Representations of the Dominican Dictator (University of Florida Press, 2005); and Our Sons Will Never Know What We Have Endured: Imaging the Chinese in Cuban Literature and Culture.” (University Press of Florida, 2007. Accepted for publication). He has also edited the book Alternative Orientalisms in Latin America and Beyond and co-edited Caminos para la paz: literatura israelí y árabe en castellano, which will be published in 2007, and has published thirty-two articles in refereed journals.
Price Uk Gbp: 39.99 Price Us Usd: 59.99
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From Writing Out of Limbo: International Childhoods, Global Nomads and Third Culture Kids
“This terrific and substantial volume is a vital step in clarifying the experiences, gifts, and struggles of those who grew up around the world, or with those who grew up elsewhere. I can’t wait to teach with it.” – Wendy Laura Belcher, PhD, Professor of Literature, Princeton University
“Well-grounded in classical perspectives and new visions of what it means to live in an intercultural world, the book offers a wonderful array of memoir, research, interviews, theory and even poetry. There’s something for everyone here!” – Anne P. Copeland, PhD, Director, The Interchange Institute
“The selections here, varied as they are, share the quiet, profound, and rich experiences of people writing on the most innocent years, transcendent of cultural boundaries. Reading this book is a travel across the globe with an impressive group of worldly citizens.” – Morten Ender, PhD, Professor of Sociology, United States Military Academy at West Point
“I recommend this book to all parents who are creating TCKs; to teachers and professors of TCKs; for general reading and understanding of the making of a citizen of the world; and, finally, to TCKs themselves, who will see that their experiences are shared with many others.” – Linda A. Garvelink, President, Foreign Service Youth Foundation
“This book is an essential contribution to the discussion of migration and the art of finding a home between borders. In vivid prose, the authors reveal the value of cultural negotiation and the complexity of identities formed on the margins.” – Neela Vaswani, PhD, Author of You Have Given Me a Country
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