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DC Field | Value | Language |
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dc.contributor.author | Bugeja, Norbert | - |
dc.date.accessioned | 2023-03-28T05:32:44Z | - |
dc.date.available | 2023-03-28T05:32:44Z | - |
dc.date.issued | 2015 | - |
dc.identifier.citation | Bugeja, N. (2015). Reincorporative trajectories : The threshold as emblem in Amos Oz’s A Tale of Love and Darkness and Orhan Pamuk’s Istanbul : Memories of a City. Journal of Postcolonial Writing, 51(1), 7-21. | en_GB |
dc.identifier.issn | 17449855 | - |
dc.identifier.uri | https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/107788 | - |
dc.description.abstract | This article approaches the problematic of liminality and liminal states in postcolonialist critique through Alain Badiou’s recent excursus on the “emblem” and its attendant logic of emblemization. The article creates an analogy between the postcolonialist conceptualization of the liminal and Badiou’s argument that the “democratic namesake” is becoming emblemized today within the global circuit of an affluent few as a figurative proxy, co-opted and artificially instituted as the condition of “everyone” – what Badiou terms the tout le monde. The article goes on to suggest that the conceptualization as well as the terminology of the liminal have experienced similar processes of emblemization when deployed in postcolonialist debates, often coming to function as rhetorical proxies for the representation of those conditions of emergency, contingency and subalternity that, when debated or “democratized” under the sign of the liminal, come to be channelled through a recognizable and palatable rhetoric that renders them sensible for the consumption of liberal metropolitan readerships. As it interrogates this dynamic, the article reads the life-narratives of Orhan Pamuk and Amos Oz to suggest that the discursive thresholds of postcoloniality continue to evince today the dwellings of a “memorial-historical dialectic” – a consciousness that cannot cease to process the “unrequitability” of overwhelming historical events, one that is itself the product, the cultural figuration and the lasting consequence of devastating acts of domination. | en_GB |
dc.language.iso | en | en_GB |
dc.publisher | Routledge | en_GB |
dc.rights | info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess | en_GB |
dc.subject | Emblems, State | en_GB |
dc.subject | Liminality in literature | en_GB |
dc.subject | Postcolonialism in literature | en_GB |
dc.subject | Middle Eastern literature -- History and criticism | en_GB |
dc.subject | Politics and literature | en_GB |
dc.subject | Political poetry -- History and criticism | en_GB |
dc.title | Reincorporative trajectories : the threshold as emblem in Amos Oz’s A tale of love and darkness and Orhan Pamuk’s Istanbul : memories of a city | en_GB |
dc.type | article | en_GB |
dc.rights.holder | The copyright of this work belongs to the author(s)/publisher. The rights of this work are as defined by the appropriate Copyright Legislation or as modified by any successive legislation. Users may access this work and can make use of the information contained in accordance with the Copyright Legislation provided that the author must be properly acknowledged. Further distribution or reproduction in any format is prohibited without the prior permission of the copyright holder. | en_GB |
dc.description.reviewed | peer-reviewed | en_GB |
dc.identifier.doi | 10.1080/17449855.2014.983696 | - |
dc.publication.title | Journal of Postcolonial Writing | en_GB |
Appears in Collections: | Scholarly Works - FacArtEng |
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