Book contents
- Globalization and Literary Studies
- Cambridge Critical Concepts
- Globalization and Literary Studies
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Part I Origins
- Part II Development
- Chapter 6 Joseph Conrad, the Global and the Sea
- Chapter 7 Mutual Equality
- Chapter 8 Edward Said
- Chapter 9 The New McWorld Order
- Chapter 10 Pharmakon, Difference and the Arche-Digital
- Chapter 11 Time–Space Compression
- Chapter 12 The Matter of Blackness in World Literature
- Chapter 13 World-Systems, Literature and Geoculture
- Chapter 14 World Author
- Part III Application
- References
- Index
Chapter 7 - Mutual Equality
Modernism and Globalization
from Part II - Development
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 April 2022
- Globalization and Literary Studies
- Cambridge Critical Concepts
- Globalization and Literary Studies
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Part I Origins
- Part II Development
- Chapter 6 Joseph Conrad, the Global and the Sea
- Chapter 7 Mutual Equality
- Chapter 8 Edward Said
- Chapter 9 The New McWorld Order
- Chapter 10 Pharmakon, Difference and the Arche-Digital
- Chapter 11 Time–Space Compression
- Chapter 12 The Matter of Blackness in World Literature
- Chapter 13 World-Systems, Literature and Geoculture
- Chapter 14 World Author
- Part III Application
- References
- Index
Summary
Beginning with Claude McKay’s “The Harlem Dancer”—in which the national space of Harlem opens up to the Caribbean from which its eponymous dancer has likely emigrated—this chapter reads the mass migration resulting from the structures of imperial capital as the determining social ground of modernist literature. Indeed, modernism registered, to an unprecedented degree, in both formal and thematic terms, an early moment of what we have now come to call globalization. But if modernist form betrays a complicity with globalization, in its persistence representation of the way national literary spaces open themselves up to cultural materials from elsewhere, it also levels a consistent critique of both capitalism and nationalism, a critique that unites its left and right wings. Modernist texts thus tend to separate economic and cultural globalization, critiquing the first, while advocating for the second, even as they demonstrate their deep inter-relationship.
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- Globalization and Literary Studies , pp. 110 - 125Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022