What we call American literature is quite often a shorthand, a simplified name for an extended tangle of relations. This is the argument ofThrough Other Continents, Wai Chee Dimock's sustained effort to read American literature as a subset of world literature.
Inspired by an unorthodox archive--ranging from epic traditions in Akkadian and Sanskrit to folk art, paintings by Veronese and Tiepolo, and the music of the Grateful Dead--Dimock constructs a long history of the world, a history she calls deep time. The civilizations of Mesopotamia, India, Egypt, China, and West Africa, as well as Europe, leave their mark on American literature, which looks dramatically different when it is removed from a strictly national or English-language context. Key authors such as Thoreau, Margaret Fuller, Ezra Pound, Robert Lowell, Gary Snyder, Leslie Silko, Gloria Naylor, and Gerald Vizenor are transformed in this light. Emerson emerges as a translator of Islamic culture; Henry James's novels become long-distance kin toGilgamesh; and Black English loses its ungrammaticalness when reclassified as a creole tongue, meshing the input from Africa, Europe, and the Americas.
Throughout, Dimock contends that American literature is answerable not to the nation-state, but to the human species as a whole, and that it looks dramatically different when removed from a strictly national or English-language context.
"Honorable Mention for the 2007 Harry Levin Prize, American Comparative Literature Association""Honorable Mention for the James Russell Lowell Prize"Wai Chee Dimockis William Lampson Professor of English and American Studies at Yale University. She is the author of
Empire for Liberty: Melville and the Poetics of Individualism(Princeton) and
Residues of Justice: Literature, Law, Philosophy. Offering new ways of reading, analyzing, and critiquing literature, Dimock's book will be invaluable to slă0