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This section includes: Notes
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Notes:
- With the spread of Western colonialism from
Europe and North America to Asia, Africa, and South America
also came the spread of its by-product; Western modernism.
- Though early criticisms were leveled at
former colonial subjects who wrote in the colonizer's
language since such writing was considered to reflect "impoverished"
experiences, more recent evaluations point to the ways that
the writings of former colonial subjects have enriched European
languages.
- Though social-realist movements varied considerably
within Chinese, Indian, and Soviet contexts, in general
they denounced the bourgeois and colonialist values expounded
in Western art and literature.
- Though English-language literatures are
well known outside India, literatures in regional languages
such as Kannada, Urdu, Sindhi, Bengali, Hindi, and Tamil
represent other aspects of Indian life.
- The literary traditions of the diverse countries
that the West calls "the Middle East" reflect
the multiple histories and cultural traditions of the region.
- In addition to experiences of Western colonialism
in Africa, African writers also address issues related to
the slave trade and to the African diaspora.
- The generally political nature of magical
realism in South American writing was often missed by earlier
generations of Western readers, who were too amazed by the
imaginative creativity of magical realism.
Text:
* blue words within the text indicate important notes to remember
- With
the spread of Western colonialism from Europe and North
America to Asia, Africa, and South America also came the
spread of its by-product; Western modernism.Colonization
and decolonization were generally savage (to use a colonialist
term) from the perspective of colonial and postcolonial
subjects. The intrusion of colonial politics in the daily
lives of individuals is addressed in the form and content
of works by Tagore, Senghor, Mahfouz, Achebe, Walcott, Soyinka,
and Goodison. Other including writersPremchand, CÈsaire,
al-Hakim, Neruda, Devi, El Saadawi, and Yehoshuaresponded
to social, political, and economic concerns at a regional
or local level.
- Though
early criticisms were leveled at former colonial subjects
who wrote in the colonizer's language, since writing
was considered to reflect "impoverished" experiences,
more recent evaluations point to the ways that the writings
of former colonial subjects have enriched European languages.
Works by writers such as Achebe, Soyinka, and Rushdie challenge
efforts to interpret meaning according to conventional reading
strategies that largely hold for many works produced by
their European and North American contemporaries.
- In addition to groups
of people who were directly colonized, others were affected
indirectly or by internal developments. The formation of
the League of Left-Wing Writers in 1930 saw the emergence
of new conservatism in response to Western modernism. Though
social-realist movements varied considerably within the
context of Chinese, Indian, and Soviet contexts, in general
they denounced the bourgeois and colonialist values expounded
in Western art and literature. Not all writers from
these regions opposed Western values at the turn of the
twentieth century. Chinese writers who traveled abroad adapted
literary models of the modern Western tradition. Japanese
writers such as Tanizaki reinvented Japanese traditions
and conventions in terms of Western traditions and conventions.
- In India, the British
colonial education system, which had been in place since
the early 1800s, made the colonizer's languageEnglishpart
of public life. English continues to be the language of
government there though over two hundred languages are spoken
in India. Though English-language literatures
are well known outside India, literatures in regional languages
such as Kannada, Urdu, Sindhi, Bengali, Hindi, and Tamil
represent other aspects of Indian life.
- The
literary traditions of the diverse countries that the West
calls "the Middle East" reflect the multiple histories
and cultural traditions of the region. Pre-Islamic,
Judaic, Islamic, and Christian traditions are as much, if
not more, a part of twentieth-century literatures as are
Western modern forms such as the novel.
- In
addition to experiences of Western colonialism in Africa,
African writers also address issues related to the slave
trade and to the African diaspora. At universities
in Paris in the 1920s and 1930s, black intellectuals from
Africa, the Caribbean, and the United States came together
to articulate positive images of blackness. Out of the négritude
movement came important interventions in both politics and
literature.
- South American literature
is often associated with magical realism, a mixture of fantasy
and realism, made popular by authors such as García
Márquez and Rulfo. The generally
political nature of magical realism in South American writing
was often missed by earlier generations of Western readers,
who were too amazed by the imaginative creativity of magical
realism. Simultaneously, writers resisted Western
literary conventions and wrote in regional styles.
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