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Locating Lumumba

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Locating Lumumba. / Vanhove, Pieter.
In: Comparative Literature Studies, Vol. 58, No. 2, 07.06.2021, p. 264-285.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Vanhove, P 2021, 'Locating Lumumba', Comparative Literature Studies, vol. 58, no. 2, pp. 264-285. <https://muse.jhu.edu/article/794573>

APA

Vanhove, P. (2021). Locating Lumumba. Comparative Literature Studies, 58(2), 264-285. https://muse.jhu.edu/article/794573

Vancouver

Vanhove P. Locating Lumumba. Comparative Literature Studies. 2021 Jun 7;58(2):264-285.

Author

Vanhove, Pieter. / Locating Lumumba. In: Comparative Literature Studies. 2021 ; Vol. 58, No. 2. pp. 264-285.

Bibtex

@article{e637bf963b84481fbe0de0a0e2349425,
title = "Locating Lumumba",
abstract = "This article builds on Joseph Slaughter{\textquoteright}s call at the 2017 American Comparative Literature Meeting to be more aware of the “locations of comparison” that scholars of literature inhabit. Slaughter reminds us of World Literature{\textquoteright}s problematic emphasis on global marketability and translatability as well as its lack of attention to enduring postcolonial inequalities. I argue with Slaughter that an alternative conception of World Literature can be and has already been imagined. I show how during the Cold War and in the wake of decolonization competing visions for World Literature were proposed on both sides of the Iron Curtain. I do this through a comparative study of three “peripheral” Cold War–era texts that foregrounded the figure of Patrice Lumumba, who was a recurring symbol of this other World Literature: Adrienne Kennedy{\textquoteright}s Funnyhouse of a Negro (1964), the Cultural Revolution–era propaganda play Chidao zhangu《赤道战鼓》 (War Drums on the Equator) by Li Huang and his collaborators, and Valerio Zurlini{\textquoteright}s 1968 Third-Worldist film Seduto alla sua destra (Black Jesus). These historical texts, I argue, ultimately point to the horizon of a World Literature and a Comparative Literature that have the ambition to never stop “locating” themselves.",
keywords = "World Literature, Comparative Literature, postcolonial studies, locations of comparison, Cold War, internationalism, socialist cosmopolitanism, Patrice Lumumba, Adrienne Kennedy, Li Huang, Valerio Zurlini",
author = "Pieter Vanhove",
year = "2021",
month = jun,
day = "7",
language = "English",
volume = "58",
pages = "264--285",
journal = "Comparative Literature Studies",
issn = "0010-4132",
publisher = "Penn State University Press",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Locating Lumumba

AU - Vanhove, Pieter

PY - 2021/6/7

Y1 - 2021/6/7

N2 - This article builds on Joseph Slaughter’s call at the 2017 American Comparative Literature Meeting to be more aware of the “locations of comparison” that scholars of literature inhabit. Slaughter reminds us of World Literature’s problematic emphasis on global marketability and translatability as well as its lack of attention to enduring postcolonial inequalities. I argue with Slaughter that an alternative conception of World Literature can be and has already been imagined. I show how during the Cold War and in the wake of decolonization competing visions for World Literature were proposed on both sides of the Iron Curtain. I do this through a comparative study of three “peripheral” Cold War–era texts that foregrounded the figure of Patrice Lumumba, who was a recurring symbol of this other World Literature: Adrienne Kennedy’s Funnyhouse of a Negro (1964), the Cultural Revolution–era propaganda play Chidao zhangu《赤道战鼓》 (War Drums on the Equator) by Li Huang and his collaborators, and Valerio Zurlini’s 1968 Third-Worldist film Seduto alla sua destra (Black Jesus). These historical texts, I argue, ultimately point to the horizon of a World Literature and a Comparative Literature that have the ambition to never stop “locating” themselves.

AB - This article builds on Joseph Slaughter’s call at the 2017 American Comparative Literature Meeting to be more aware of the “locations of comparison” that scholars of literature inhabit. Slaughter reminds us of World Literature’s problematic emphasis on global marketability and translatability as well as its lack of attention to enduring postcolonial inequalities. I argue with Slaughter that an alternative conception of World Literature can be and has already been imagined. I show how during the Cold War and in the wake of decolonization competing visions for World Literature were proposed on both sides of the Iron Curtain. I do this through a comparative study of three “peripheral” Cold War–era texts that foregrounded the figure of Patrice Lumumba, who was a recurring symbol of this other World Literature: Adrienne Kennedy’s Funnyhouse of a Negro (1964), the Cultural Revolution–era propaganda play Chidao zhangu《赤道战鼓》 (War Drums on the Equator) by Li Huang and his collaborators, and Valerio Zurlini’s 1968 Third-Worldist film Seduto alla sua destra (Black Jesus). These historical texts, I argue, ultimately point to the horizon of a World Literature and a Comparative Literature that have the ambition to never stop “locating” themselves.

KW - World Literature

KW - Comparative Literature

KW - postcolonial studies

KW - locations of comparison

KW - Cold War

KW - internationalism

KW - socialist cosmopolitanism

KW - Patrice Lumumba

KW - Adrienne Kennedy

KW - Li Huang

KW - Valerio Zurlini

M3 - Journal article

VL - 58

SP - 264

EP - 285

JO - Comparative Literature Studies

JF - Comparative Literature Studies

SN - 0010-4132

IS - 2

ER -