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Queequeg's Coffin Birgit Brander Rasmussen 978082234954
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Queequeg's Coffin


Prezzo: € 17.38
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The confrontation between European and native peoples in the Americas is often portrayed as a conflict between literate civilization and illiterate savages. That perception ignores the many indigenous forms of writing that were not alphabet-based, like Mayan pictoglyphs, Iroquois wampum, Ojibwe birchbark scrolls, and Incan quipus. Queequeg's Coffin offers a new definition of writing that comprehends the dazzling diversity of literature in the Americas before and after European arrivals. From a 1645 French-Haudenosaunee Peace Council to Herman Melville's youthful encounters with Polynesian hieroglyphics, this groundbreaking study recovers previously overlooked moments of textual reciprocity in the colonial sphere. By recovering the literatures and textual practices that were indigenous to the Americas, Brigit Brander Rasmussen re-imagines the colonial conflict as one organized by alternative but equally rich forms of literacy. From Central Mexico to the Northeastern shores, in the Andes and across the American continents, indigenous people and European newcomers engaged each other in dialogues about ways of writing and recording knowledge. In Queequeg's Coffin, such exchanges become the foundation for a new kind of early American literary studies.



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Quequeeg's Coffin sweeps away the origin stories of American literature by beginning with the encounter between European colonialism and indigenous cultures; it revises prevailing notions of 'literacy' and 'writing' by placing indigenous literary traditions alongside, and in dynamic relation to, the alphabetic systems of the colonizers; and it emphasizes the often volatile interactions between, and continuing sycretism among, vastly different notions of literacy. It is the realization of an exciting, ambitious undertaking. David Kazanjian, author of The Colonizing Trick: National Culture and Imperial Citizenship in Early America Birgit Brander Rasmussen's exploration looks into the formation of the Americas beyond and below imperial/national boundaries. The excavation she proposes invites us to rethink what 'American literature' means. Beyond literature written in alphabetic characters and English language, there are 'American literatures' in other imperial languages as well. But, above all, there are non-alphabetic writings and Native Americans' narratives as well as Afro-American and Arabic literacies among slave narratives. This book announces the end of an era in the national literary imagination and opens up 'America' beyond the United States. Walter D. Mignolo, author of The Darker Side of Western Modernity: Global Futures, Decolonial Options

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