Description
The writers discussed by Bone emphasize how migration and labor have reconfigured the region's relation to the nation and a range of transnational scales: hemispheric (Jamaica, the Bahamas, Haiti), transatlantic/Black Atlantic (Denmark, England, Mauritania), and transpacific/global southern (Australia, China, Vietnam). Writers under consideration include Zora Neale Hurston, Nella Larsen, John Oliver Killens, Russell Banks, Erna Brodber, Cynthia Shearer, Ha Jin, Monique Truong, Lan Cao, Toni Morrison, Peter Matthiessen, Dave Eggers, and Laila Lalami.
The book also seeks to resituate southern studies by drawing on theories of "scale" that originated in human geography. In this way, Bone also offers a new paradigm in which the U.S. South is thoroughly engaged with a range of other scales from the local to the global, making both literature about the region and southern studies itself truly transnational in scope.
About the Author
Martyn Bone is an associate professor of American literature at the University of Copenhagen. He is author of The Postsouthern Sense of Place in Contemporary Fiction, editor of Perspectives on Barry Hannah, and coeditor of Creating and Consuming the American South.
Reviews
"Bone sustains a delicate, and exigent, scholarly balancing act. [...] It's refreshing to read a southernist monograph that doesn't include an obligatory Faulkner chapter. [...]
Bone's elegant writing is exhaustively researched and well argued. He covers a lot of ground, concisely but thoroughly surveying southern studies and American studies debates about region, race, and labor. He also provides a wide-ranging survey of the transnational South (ideal for assigning in both undergraduate- and graduate-level courses). Where the New World Is is an important and necessary book. Southernists and Americanists alike should read it, examine their assumptions, rework their syllabi, and slay the zombified South of the Agrarians once and for all." - ALH Online Review, Series XVI
Book Information
ISBN 9780820351865
Author Martyn Bone
Format Hardback
Page Count 256
Imprint University of Georgia Press
Publisher University of Georgia Press
Weight(grams) 614g