Review:
Prose of the World is an enormously compelling and vivid study. It shows convincingly that the experience of colonial banality was a principal engine of literary modernism. Bringing a transnational perspective to the history of twentieth-century Anglophone fiction, Majumdar provincializes modernism by putting its aesthetic celebration of the ordinary into conversation with the geopolitics of crushing boredom. The result is an ambitious, timely, and eloquent account of the relationship between early-twentieth-century fiction and the contemporary global novel in English.--Rebecca L. Walkowitz, Rutgers University, author of Cosmopolitan Style: Modernism Beyond the Nation
This well-informed, searching study throws new light on the literary consequences of empire. Its insightful account of the experience of boredom and banality on the political and cultural periphery, and of writers' responses to this experience, will be valued by all those interested in the global transformations of modernism and the relation between artistic creativity and colonial hegemony.--Derek Attridge, University of York
There are many impressive things in this book: it provides us with a powerful rethinking of the vexed relationship between empire and modernism, an unprecedented probing of the internal logic of the modernist movement, and a smart meditation on the role of the ordinary and banal in the making of the language of modernism.--Simon Gikandi, Princeton University
An ambitious and original study that is indispensable reading for any scholars of modernism and postcolonial studies.--Adam Barrows "The Comparatist "
Prose of the World reminds us that while the everyday is always banal, it is not always boring.--Priyasha Mukhopadhyay "Interventions "
Saikat Majumdar's Prose of the World is an erudite, wide-ranging, and innovative study of Anglophone world literature that opens up an array of fundamental theoretical and methodological questions in literary studies.--Pranav Jani "James Joyce Quarterly "
Works such as these reenergize and alter our engagement with global literature.--Celiese Lypka "ARIEL "
Thorough and challenging, this study offers the reader... a new way of thinking about late-colonial modernist fiction's deployment of the banal.... [and] offers a powerful if indirect commentary on the considerable failings of postcolonial modernity.--Times Literary Supplement
Highly recommended.--Choice
A timely contribution to global modernist and contemporary Anglophone literary studies.... Provocative.... [Prose of the World] will serve as a reference point for future discussions of modernist and contemporary literature.--Contemporary Literature
About the Author:
Saikat Majumdar is an assistant professor of English at Stanford University and the author of a novel, Silverfish.
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