Haiti and Mozambique: Postcolonial Literature in the Context of Combined and Uneven Development

In this essay, I compare two narratives from different nations, Haiti and Mozambique, in order to analyze intersections between the postcolonial contexts in which each fiction is embedded. Two theoretical perspectives inform my reading of Nadine Pinede’s “Departure Lounge” (2011) and João Paulo Borg...

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Main Author: Sandra Sousa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centro de Estudos Sociais da Universidade de Coimbra 2016-12-01
Series:e-cadernos ces
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/eces/2156
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author Sandra Sousa
author_facet Sandra Sousa
author_sort Sandra Sousa
collection DOAJ
description In this essay, I compare two narratives from different nations, Haiti and Mozambique, in order to analyze intersections between the postcolonial contexts in which each fiction is embedded. Two theoretical perspectives inform my reading of Nadine Pinede’s “Departure Lounge” (2011) and João Paulo Borges Coelho’s Campo de trânsito (2007). I draw first on Vivek Chibber’s argument that postcolonial studies fail to provide an adequate basis for a theory of human rights and a practice of global solidarity. I then introduce the Warwick Research Collective’s elaboration of a new theory of world literature constructed around the concept of “combined and uneven development”. My discussion of “Departure Lounge” and Campo de trânsito subsequently focuses on the fictional portrayal of emergent practices within traditional societies experiencing a process of modernization and the effects of the world capitalist system. I conclude by proposing a way out of the limitations of postcolonial studies.
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spelling doaj-art-e8cd5819d47b4d5d9e2386e507b68e952025-08-20T01:54:41ZengCentro de Estudos Sociais da Universidade de Coimbrae-cadernos ces1647-07372016-12-012610.4000/eces.2156Haiti and Mozambique: Postcolonial Literature in the Context of Combined and Uneven DevelopmentSandra SousaIn this essay, I compare two narratives from different nations, Haiti and Mozambique, in order to analyze intersections between the postcolonial contexts in which each fiction is embedded. Two theoretical perspectives inform my reading of Nadine Pinede’s “Departure Lounge” (2011) and João Paulo Borges Coelho’s Campo de trânsito (2007). I draw first on Vivek Chibber’s argument that postcolonial studies fail to provide an adequate basis for a theory of human rights and a practice of global solidarity. I then introduce the Warwick Research Collective’s elaboration of a new theory of world literature constructed around the concept of “combined and uneven development”. My discussion of “Departure Lounge” and Campo de trânsito subsequently focuses on the fictional portrayal of emergent practices within traditional societies experiencing a process of modernization and the effects of the world capitalist system. I conclude by proposing a way out of the limitations of postcolonial studies.https://journals.openedition.org/eces/2156postcolonialismHaitiintersectionalityMarxismMozambique
spellingShingle Sandra Sousa
Haiti and Mozambique: Postcolonial Literature in the Context of Combined and Uneven Development
e-cadernos ces
postcolonialism
Haiti
intersectionality
Marxism
Mozambique
title Haiti and Mozambique: Postcolonial Literature in the Context of Combined and Uneven Development
title_full Haiti and Mozambique: Postcolonial Literature in the Context of Combined and Uneven Development
title_fullStr Haiti and Mozambique: Postcolonial Literature in the Context of Combined and Uneven Development
title_full_unstemmed Haiti and Mozambique: Postcolonial Literature in the Context of Combined and Uneven Development
title_short Haiti and Mozambique: Postcolonial Literature in the Context of Combined and Uneven Development
title_sort haiti and mozambique postcolonial literature in the context of combined and uneven development
topic postcolonialism
Haiti
intersectionality
Marxism
Mozambique
url https://journals.openedition.org/eces/2156
work_keys_str_mv AT sandrasousa haitiandmozambiquepostcolonialliteratureinthecontextofcombinedandunevendevelopment