Caribbeanness as a Global Phenomenon
Junot Díaz, Edwidge Danticat, and Cristina Garcia
Produktform: Buch / Einband - flex.(Paperback)
In their fictional works, the Caribbean diaspora writers Junot Díaz, Edwidge Danticat, and Cristina García, who live and write in the United States, grapple with the continuing impact that coloniality, the ideology behind colonialism, has in the Caribbean. In dialogue with Caribbean theory and Walter Mignolo’s border thinking, this study examines how texts by Díaz, Danticat, and García render coloniality visible and how they offer strategies of plurality and border crossings as a means of liberation and epistemic decolonization, contesting absolute and universal positions of power. This book demonstrates that Caribbean and Western knowledge systems can be read in dialogue, which yields new strategies for solving complex problems such as intercultural conflicts and asymmetric power relations. In its potential application to other contexts, Caribbeanness gains global relevance.
In a well-crafted and balanced argument (focusing on Cuba, the Dominican Republic and Haiti) Rebecca Fuchs makes a signal decolonial-ethical move in scholarship: aware of the pitfalls of “area studies,” according to which First World scholars “studied” Third World Cultures, she aims instead “to contour Caribbeanness rather than defining or speaking for it.” For this reason alone, the book is a must read. How-ever, and because of it, Cristina García’s, Junot Díaz’s and Edwidge Danticat’s story-telling acquires a new meaning under Fuchs’s ethical positioning.
—Walter D. Mignolo,
William H. Wannamaker Professor of Literature, Duke Universityweiterlesen
Dieser Artikel gehört zu den folgenden Serien
26,50 € inkl. MwSt.
kostenloser Versand
lieferbar - Lieferzeit 10-15 Werktage
zurück