Globalizing Literary History

In the last decades, national and transnational literary histories have continued to take different approaches. The typical new national literary histories have discarded the teleology of grand narratives by chopping up the chronological line into individual essays on specific subjects, each attache...

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Main Author: John Neubauer
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: University of Tartu Press 2013-06-01
Series:Interlitteraria
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.utlib.ee/index.php/IL/article/view/1009
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author John Neubauer
author_facet John Neubauer
author_sort John Neubauer
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description In the last decades, national and transnational literary histories have continued to take different approaches. The typical new national literary histories have discarded the teleology of grand narratives by chopping up the chronological line into individual essays on specific subjects, each attached to a single date. They compensate for the temporal disintegration with a cultural broadening of literature’s scope and occasional international references. The transnational counter trend has been producing regional histories (of Latin America, East-Central Europe, the Iberian Peninsula and Scandinavia), a history of literature in the European languages sponsored by the ICLA, and schemes for global approaches. Moving towards globalization poses the problem of coordinating vast and divergent empirical information. Two suggestions may help moving towards global perspectives: 1) replace the traditional period concepts with landmarks based on the introduction of new writing technologies, and 2) conceive of literary and cultural history as a sequence of adaptations. The latter may offer opportunities to interlink culture and biology.
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spelling doaj.art-b76123492003493aab38b2072b9a08d92022-12-22T01:39:06ZdeuUniversity of Tartu PressInterlitteraria1406-07012228-47292013-06-0118110.12697/IL.2013.18.1.01Globalizing Literary HistoryJohn Neubauer0University of AmsterdamIn the last decades, national and transnational literary histories have continued to take different approaches. The typical new national literary histories have discarded the teleology of grand narratives by chopping up the chronological line into individual essays on specific subjects, each attached to a single date. They compensate for the temporal disintegration with a cultural broadening of literature’s scope and occasional international references. The transnational counter trend has been producing regional histories (of Latin America, East-Central Europe, the Iberian Peninsula and Scandinavia), a history of literature in the European languages sponsored by the ICLA, and schemes for global approaches. Moving towards globalization poses the problem of coordinating vast and divergent empirical information. Two suggestions may help moving towards global perspectives: 1) replace the traditional period concepts with landmarks based on the introduction of new writing technologies, and 2) conceive of literary and cultural history as a sequence of adaptations. The latter may offer opportunities to interlink culture and biology.https://ojs.utlib.ee/index.php/IL/article/view/1009literary historyregionalizationglobalizationadaptation
spellingShingle John Neubauer
Globalizing Literary History
Interlitteraria
literary history
regionalization
globalization
adaptation
title Globalizing Literary History
title_full Globalizing Literary History
title_fullStr Globalizing Literary History
title_full_unstemmed Globalizing Literary History
title_short Globalizing Literary History
title_sort globalizing literary history
topic literary history
regionalization
globalization
adaptation
url https://ojs.utlib.ee/index.php/IL/article/view/1009
work_keys_str_mv AT johnneubauer globalizingliteraryhistory