Article (Scientific journals)
Europe and Post-colonial Creativity: A Metaphysical Cross-culturalism
Maes-Jelinek, Hena
2005In European Review, 13 (1), p. 91-102
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Abstract :
[en] In Shakespeare's The Tempest, the meeting between Prospero and Caliban is an allegory of a Renaissance colonial encounter. Although Prospero emphasizes his gift of language to Caliban, he deems him incapable of 'nurture' (cultural progress). After the Second World War, the Barbadian novelist Georges Lamming saw in that gift the possibility of a 'new departure', which in the following decades was to modify not only Caliban's prospects but most emphatically the European, and specifically, the British cultural scene. I intend to illustrate this transformation through the contribution of postcolonial writers to the metamorphosis of the 'Great Tradition' of the English novel. The changes are formal, linguistic but also evince a metaphysical cross-culturalism best exemplified, among others, in the fiction of the Guyanese-born, British novelist Wilson Harris.
Research center :
CEREP - Centre d'Enseignement et de Recherche en Études Postcoloniales - ULiège
Disciplines :
Literature
Author, co-author :
Maes-Jelinek, Hena ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Langues et littératures germaniques
Language :
English
Title :
Europe and Post-colonial Creativity: A Metaphysical Cross-culturalism
Publication date :
2005
Journal title :
European Review
ISSN :
1062-7987
eISSN :
1474-0575
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press
Volume :
13
Issue :
1
Pages :
91-102
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
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since 01 June 2016

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