Fr. 66.00

Literature and the War on Terror - Nation, Democracy and Liberalisation

English · Paperback / Softback

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This book examines cultural imaginations post 9/11. It explores the idea of a religious community and its multifaceted representations in literature and popular culture. The essays in the volume focus on the role of literature, film, music, television shows and other cultural forms in opening up spaces for complex reflections on identities and cultures, and how they enable us to rethink the 'trauma of familiarity', post-traumatic heterotopias, religious extremism and the idea of the 'neighbour' in post-9/11 literary and cultural imagination. The volume also probes the intersections of religion, popular media, televised simulacrum and digital martyrdom in the wake of 9/11. It also probes the simulation of new- age media images with reference to the creation and dissemination of 'martyrs', the languages of grief, religionisation of terrorism, islamophobia, religious stereotypes and the reading of comics in writing the terror.
An essential read, the book reclaims and reinterprets the alternative to a Eurocentric/Americentric understanding of cultural and geopolitical structures of global designs. It will be of great interest to researchers of literature and cultural studies, media studies, politics, film studies and South Asian studies.

List of contents

 
Notes on Contributors
Acknowledgements
 
Introduction: Surveying the Frontiers of Home, Democracy and Belonging in the Literature of War on Terror
Sk Sagir Ali
 
Part I: Cartographies of Otherness and Strategic Outsiderism in Post 9/11 fictions
1)   An Extravagant and Wheeling Stranger Encountering the Muslim as the Neighbour
Shinjini Basu
 
2) Rewriting the American Narrative of Muslim Men: Ayad Akhtar s Depiction of Race, Gender, and Masculinity
 
Nalini Iyer
 
3) There is no Israel for Me : Je Suis Charlie, the Ends of the French Republic, and the Laicistic Contours of Islamophobic Dystopia in Michel Houellebecq s Submission. 
Swayamdipta Das 
 
4) Sinhala Budhist Nationalism and Shrinking Space for Muslims in Sri Lanka: The Post Tamil Elam War and 9/11 Situation
 Rajeesh CS
 
5) The Making of Xenophobia: Migrating from Hatred to Grief in the Novels of Mohsin Hamid
 Debamitra Kar
 
6) Pax Americana! : American Exceptionalism and Salman Rushdie s Language of State            Shayeari Dutta
Part II: Reconfiguring the Contours of Home, Belonging, and the Rights of Conditional Citizenship in Post 9/11 Novels
 
7) Imagining Citizenship, Democracy and Belonging in Laila Lalami s Hope and Other
Dangerous Pursuits and Ayad Akhtar s Homeland Elegies
 Sk Sagir Ali
 
8)  Globalization, Islamic Machine, and Critical Localism in the Aftermath of 9/11
 Mosarrap Hossain Khan
 
9) War, Terror and Migration: Hamid s Exit West as a Cosmopolitan Novel
 Faisal Nazir
 
Part III: Popular Imagination and the Ideological Representational Apparatus of Western Media and Culture in Post 9/11 Climate
 
10) Tribute in Light: Memory (Re)Placed
Pinaki De
 
11) The Radical Sadness of Late-Night Television: The Comedy Talk Show in the Shadow of 9/11
Sudipto Sanyal and  Somnath Basu
 
12) 9/11 and the Supervillain Crisis: A Study of the Terrorist Villain and Terrorism in select MCU films
Rohan Hassan
 
13) Post 9/11 Digital Martyrdom Digital Ephemera of Ireland and Digital Protest Movement of Bangladesh
Kusumita Datta
 
Part IV: Locating Other Lives and the Unmappable Registers of Precarity in 9/11 Novels
14) Possible Lives, Impossible Times:The Tragic Queer Diasporic Muslim in Ghalib Shiraz Dhalla s The Exiles
Anil Pradhan
 
15) You are My Creator, but I am Your Master : A Reading of Frankenstein in Baghdad as a Postcolonial Pharmakon
Avijit Basak
 
16) The Trauma of Familiarity: A Very Brief Overview of British-Muslim Writings in the Post 9/11 UK
Pinaki Roy
 
Index


 

Summary

This book examines cultural imaginations post 9/11. It explores the idea of a religious community and its multifaceted representations in literature and popular culture.

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