Toward De-exceptionalizing Migration: Intra-African Diasporic Writing in South Africa

IF 0.3 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE, AFRICAN, AUSTRALIAN, CANADIAN Research in African Literatures Pub Date : 2022-11-01 DOI:10.2979/reseafrilite.53.1.10
R. Fasselt
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT:Migration has never before occupied such a prominent place in African cultural production as it does today. Yet, notwithstanding an increasing focus on intra-African migration in the social sciences, literary migration scholarship has largely focused on African migration to the West, as the growing body of studies on outward-oriented Afropolitan migration novels indicates. In this paper, I examine how the Afropolitan consciousness that structures South-North migration novels is reframed in literature of continental migration and mobility in post-Marikana South Africa. While the themes of xenophobia and migration have emerged as central preoccupations in South African literature from the early 2000s onward, there has been a shift in literary production more recently with the publication of a range of works by African diasporic writers in South Africa. Drawing on Ekow Duker's Yellowbone (2019), Rémy Ngamije's The Eternal Audience of One (2019), and Sue Nyathi's The Gold Diggers (2018), I argue that these texts interrogate South Africa's complex relationship to "Africanness" and forge new pathways for continental dialogue that allow us to resituate South African-based writing within larger debates in contemporary African literary studies. This category of intra-African diasporic fiction calls into question simplifying binaries of outward, Western-oriented African writing and locally produced popular, yet internationally disregarded, texts (Harris). Rather, it scrutinizes the idea of "Africa" in global literary circuits from the position of intra-African diasporic subjectivities. Drawing attention to the long history of intra-African mobilities, the cross-continental thrust in many of these works also productively speaks to recent scholarly efforts to reframe migration studies in ways that insist on the de-exceptionalization of migration and the breakdown of binary formulations of migrant and non-migrant identities.
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走向去例外化移民:南非的非洲内部双孢子写作
摘要:移民从未像今天这样在非洲文化生产中占据如此重要的地位。然而,尽管社会科学对非洲内部移民的关注越来越多,但文学移民研究主要集中在非洲向西方的移民上,正如越来越多的面向外部的非洲移民小说所表明的那样。在本文中,我研究了结构南北移民小说的非洲人意识如何在后马里卡纳南非大陆移民和流动文学中被重新塑造。自21世纪初以来,仇外心理和移民的主题一直是南非文学的中心话题,但最近,随着非洲散居作家在南非出版了一系列作品,文学创作发生了转变。根据艾科·杜克的《黄骨头》(2019)、莱姆米·恩加米耶的《一个人的永恒听众》(2019)和苏·尼亚希的《淘金者》(2018),我认为这些文本质疑了南非与“非洲性”的复杂关系,并为大陆对话开辟了新的途径,使我们能够在当代非洲文学研究的更大辩论中恢复以南非为基础的写作。这类非洲内部散居小说对简单化的二元论提出了质疑,即向外的、以西方为导向的非洲写作和当地生产的、受欢迎的、但在国际上被忽视的文本(哈里斯)。相反,它从非洲内部流散的主体性的角度审视了全球文学循环中的“非洲”概念。注意到非洲内部流动的悠久历史,这些作品中的跨大陆推进也富有成效地说明了最近的学术努力,以坚持移民的非例外化和打破移民和非移民身份的二元构想的方式重新构建移民研究。
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来源期刊
Research in African Literatures
Research in African Literatures LITERATURE, AFRICAN, AUSTRALIAN, CANADIAN-
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期刊介绍: Founded in 1970, Research in African Literatures is the premier journal of African literary studies worldwide and provides a forum in English for research on the oral and written literatures of Africa, as well as information on African publishing, announcements of importance to Africanists, and notes and queries of literary interest. Reviews of current scholarly books are included in every issue, often presented as review essays, and a forum offers readers the opportunity to respond to issues raised in articles and book reviews.
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