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y separately published work icon The Journal of Commonwealth Literature periodical issue   peer reviewed assertion
Issue Details: First known date: 2018... vol. 53 no. 4 December 2018 of The Journal of Commonwealth Literature est. 1965 The Journal of Commonwealth Literature
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Contents

* Contents derived from the 2018 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Annual Bibliography Of Commonwealth Literature 2017 : Translation, Material Cultures and Questions of Genre, Vassilena Parashkevova , single work criticism

'Two overlapping sets of themes stand out in the bibliographies from 2017: one concerning language, translation and bi-, multi-, poly- and trans-lingualism and the other print and material cultures, book histories, publishing, circulation, genre and “literary value.” Works listed in this issue reflect and respond to the role of English or French as hegemonic languages in containing and sanctioning a range of “other,” “minor,” indigenous languages or vernaculars and their oratures/literatures in the manner of an omniscient narrative that frames and mediates the “foreign talk,” “accents” or idiolects of characters as deviations from its own normativity for a dominant linguistic community of “native speakers,” in the process erasing its own origin. We have inherited, as David Gramling reminds us in The Invention of Monolingualism (2016), the early modern idea of “‘a’ language, whose essence inhered in its promise to know everything, say everything, and translate everything” (Gramling, 2016: 2). Such a desire for linguistic mastery is reflected in the “enumerative modality” of colonialism setting out to identify, label and control local languages and their speakers. It continues to inform processes of “naming, misnaming, consolidation, marketing and reproduction” in the publishing, translation, academic research or host nation language teaching industries and the concomitant “thickening of citizenship around language competence and use”. Further, monolingualism appears capable of extending its repertoire by impersonating notions of multilingualism in the marketing of World Literature, as Graham Huggan has shown in The Postcolonial Exotic (Huggan, 2001), or varieties of “multilingual upskilling” promoted by the neoliberal state as “models for global success and competitiveness” (ibid: 12, 250).' (Introduction)

(p. 515–525)
Australia, Nathan Hobby , Van Ikin , Margaret Stevenson , single work criticism bibliography (p. 526–545)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Last amended 10 Jan 2019 06:05:15
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