ASNEL Papers 11

Embracing the Other.
Addressing Xenophobia in the New Literatures in English.

ASNEL Papers 11.
MOHR, Dunja M. (Ed.)
Brill, Amsterdam/New York, NY, 2008.

order

In the wake of addressing multiculturalism, transculturalism, racism, and ethnicity, the issue of xenophobia and xenophilia has been somewhat marginalized. The present collection seeks, from a variety of angles, to investigate the relations between Self and Other in the New Literatures in English. How do we register differences and what does an embrace signify for both Self and Other? The contributors deal with a variety of topics, ranging from theoretical reflections on xenophobia, its exploration in terms of intertextuality and New Zealand/Maori historiography, to analyses of migrant and border narratives, and issues of transitionality, authenticity, and racism in Canada and South Africa. Others negotiate identity and alterity in Nigerian, Malaysian, Australian, Indian, Canadian, and Caribbean texts, or reflect on diaspora and orientalism in Australian-Asian and West Indian contexts.

Table of Contents

Embracing the Other: An Introduction

Poetry

Susan N. KIGULI: One Wing; Home Floats in the Distance; Floating My Presence; Stories Retold

Theory, Writing History, and Textuality

Edwin THUMBOO: Conditions of Cross-Cultural Perceptions: The Other Looks Back

Judith DELL PANNY: Benign Xenophobia? The Testimony of Maori Literature

Russell WEST-PAVLOV: ‘Daft Questions’: Xenophobia, Teaching, and Social Semiosis in Caribbean-British Fiction: Using Intertextuality and Narratology to Analyze a Text by David Dabydeen

Migrant and Border Narratives

Mala PANDURANG: How Brave Is Our New World?

Danilo Victorino MANARPAAC: Desire and Loathing in Carlos Bulosan’s America Is in the Heart and Bienvenido Santos’s The Man Who
(Thought He) Looked Like Robert Taylor

Vera ALEXANDER: “Worlds of Disenchantment”: Alienation and Change in Adib Khan’s Seasonal Adjustments

Dipli SAIKIA: Writing From the Border, Doing Away With Margins: Carl Muller’s Sri Lankan Burgher Narrative

Virginia RICHTER: The Civilized Ape

Transitional States

Martin GENETSCH: Race and Racism in Contemporary Canadian Fiction: M.G. Vassanji’s No New Land

Jochen PETZOLD: White Angst in South Africa: The Apocalyptic Visions of John Conyngham

Natividad MARTÍNEZ MARÍN: Nadine Gordimer’s Later Novels: Or, The Fiction of Otherness

Negotiating Identity and Alterity

Mary E. MODUPE KOLAWOLE: Multicultural Strategies and Alterity: Transgressing the Other in Contemporary Nigerian Women’s Short
Stories

Raihanah M.M.: The Other Within: The Malaysian Experience

J&oouml;rg HEINKE: The Resistance to Being (Em)Braced: Peter Carey’s Jack Maggs and David Malouf’s Johnno

Sandhya PATEL: The Difficulty of Being: Reading and Speaking in Arundhati Roy’s The God of Small Things

Laurenz VOLKMANN: The Quest for Identity in Benjamin Zephaniah’s Poetry

Diaspora and Orientalism

David S. LA BRECHE : Stereotype, Prejudice, and Illusion in the Austral-Asian Otherworld

Sissy HELFF: Desired Exotica: Gendered Spaces in Queer West Indian Diasporic Fiction

Canadian and South African Theatre

Ginny RATSOY: Dramatizing Alterity: Relational Characterization in Postcolonial British Columbia Plays

Henning SCHÄFER: Disappointing Expectations: Native Canadian Theatre and the Politics of Authenticity

Haike FRANK: Embracing Oneself and the Other: Overcoming Racial Hatred in South African Drama

Notes on Contributors.