Tragedy and Postcolonial Literature

Tragedy and Postcolonial Literature
sku: COM9781108830980USED
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   Description
Hardcover. 9 1/4" X 6 1/4". xii, 334pp. Very mild shelf wear to unclipped dust jacket. Bound in black paper over boards with spine lettered in gilt. Hard bump to head of spine, with small hole to top edge of rear board. Pages are clean and unmarked. Binding is sound. ABOUT THIS BOOK: This book examines tragedy and tragic philosophy from the Greeks through Shakespeare to the present day. It explores key themes in the links between suffering and ethics through postcolonial literature. Ato Quayson reconceives how we think of World literature under the singular and fertile rubric of tragedy. He draws from many key works - Oedipus Rex, Philoctetes, Medea, Hamlet, Macbeth, and King Lear - to establish the main contours of tragedy. Quayson uses Shakespeare's Othello, Chinua Achebe, Wole Soyinka, Tayeb Salih, Arundhati Roy, Toni Morrison, Samuel Beckett and J.M. Coetzee to qualify and expand the purview and terms by which Western tragedy has long been understood. Drawing on key texts such as The Poetics and The Nicomachean Ethics, and augmenting them with Frantz Fanon and the Akan concept of musuo (taboo), Quayson formulates a supple, insightful new theory of ethical choice and the impediments against it. This is a major book from a leading critic in literary studies.(Publisher).
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