Universität KonstanzExzellenzcluster „Kulturelle Grundlagen von Integration“

Caribbean Literature and Globalisation

2. August 2017

poster

The summer school will attempt to analyse effect of globalisation processes on the current field of Caribbean literature.

Since the initial phase of accelerated globalisation, the Caribbean has been affected by the clash of Amerindian, European and African cultures. Added to these later on were Asian and North American cultures, making the Caribbean a unique place in the study of hybridisation, creolisation and transculturation processes that have arisen since the end of the 20th and beginning of 21st centuries. Countries in the Caribbean, and their respective societies, are at the heart of complex transnational networks that tie together a multitude of inter- and extra-Caribbean spaces within a constant circulation of people, cultural artefacts and knowledge. This flux has intensified with the radical changes that have come about in the fields of technology, economics, politics, and languages. The expansion of the world wide and digital revolution have once again highlighted how the Caribbean is interwoven with other parts of the world, creating at the same time new possibilities of connection between the Caribbean and its other diasporas.

  • Firstly, we will look at the position occupied by Caribbean literature and at the various strategies used to promote it on the international literature market, bearing in mind all the while the sociological and economic factors that come along with its global distribution.
  • A second line of research that the summer school will attempt to develop will be that of the transformation and re-codification of poetic and literary genres in the current phase of accelerated globalisation.
  • A third line of research will focus specifically on new means of communication. It will look at how digital tools have expanded or transformed the context of literature within the Caribbean context, offering up new possibilities for interaction, artistic creation and archiving of knowledge.
  • Finally, we will look at the complex and ambivalent relationships that Caribbean writers maintain with mass culture as a place for representing the various cultures of the Caribbean.

The interdisciplinary summer school Caribbean literature and globalisation is organised by the Literature Department of the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Lyon (ENS) and the Literature Faculty of the University of Konstanz. Academics and guest artists from the Caribbean, Germany and the United States will participate in the summer school.

Speakers

  • Kelly Baker Josephs (York College, CUNY/Williams College)
  • Monique Blérald (Université des Antilles et de la Guyane)
  • Gesine Müller (Université de Cologne)
  • Catalina Quesada Gómez (University of Miami)

 

Wed–Sat, 2–5 August 2017
University of Konstanz, F 420

Contact

PD Dr. Miriam Lay Brander miriam.lay-brander[at]uni-konstanz.de


Files:
Programme_SummerSchool_CaribbeanLiterature.pdf1.56 Mi