|

“Tropicalization” is the central metaphor of this analysis, a term that incorporates both the construction of various dynamic tropes by which the colonized are viewed and the site of the study, primarily the tropics. Tropicopolitans, then, are those people who bear and resist the representations of colonialist discourse. In readings that expose new relationships between literary representation and colonialism in the eighteenth century, Aravamudan considers such texts as Behn’s Oroonoko, Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe and Captain Singleton, Addison’s Cato, and Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels and The Drapier’s Letters. He extends his argument to include analyses of Johnson’s Rasselas, Beckford’s Vathek, Montagu’s travel letters, Equiano’s autobiography, Burke’s political and aesthetic writings, and Abbé de Raynal’s Histoire des deux Indes. Offering a radical approach to literary history, this study provides new mechanisms for understanding the development of anticolonial agency.
Introducing eighteenth-century studies to a postcolonial hermeneutics, Tropicopolitans will interest scholars engaged in postcolonial studies, eighteenth-century literature, and literary theory.

- New Book: The Awakening by Kate Chopin
- New Book: Texas Almanac published by Texas Historical Association 2016-2017
- New Additions to the UNT Dallas Library Catalogue
- New Book: Absent Lord by Lawrence A. Babb
- New Book: God's Plot & Man's Stories by Leopold Damrosch Jr.
- New Book: Pre-occupation of postcolonial studies by Fawzia Afzal-Khan and Kalpana Seshadri-Crooks
- New Book: Tropicopolitans by Srinivas Aravamudan
- New Book: The Cult of Nothingness: The Philosophers and the Buddha by Roger-Pol Droit
- New Book: When the Beat was Born written by Laban Carrick Hill, Illustrated by Theodore Taylor III.
- New Book:The Reader, the Text, the Poem by Louise Michelle Rosenblatt
0 comments:
Post a Comment