Global Matters: The Transnational Turn in Literary Studies
By Paul Jay
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As the pace of cultural globalization accelerates, the discipline of literary studies is undergoing dramatic transformation. Scholars and critics focus increasingly on theorizing difference and complicating the geographical framework defining their approaches. At the same time, Anglophone literature is being created by a remarkably transnational, multicultural group of writers exploring many of the same concerns, including the intersecting effects of colonialism, decolonization, migration, and globalization.
Paul Jay surveys these developments, highlighting key debates within literary and cultural studies about the impact of globalization over the past two decades. Global Matters provides a concise, informative overview of theoretical, critical, and curricular issues driving the transnational turn in literary studies and how these issues have come to dominate contemporary global fiction as well. Through close, imaginative readings Jay analyzes the intersecting histories of colonialism, decolonization, and globalization engaged by an array of texts from Africa, Europe, South Asia, and the Americas, including Zadie Smith's White Teeth, Junot Díaz's The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, Kiran Desai's The Inheritance of Loss, Arundhati Roy's The God of Small Things, Vikram Chandra's Red Earth and Pouring Rain, Mohsin Hamid's Moth Smoke, and Zakes Mda's The Heart of Redness. A timely intervention in the most exciting debates within literary studies, Global Matters is a comprehensive guide to the transnational nature of Anglophone literature today and its relationship to the globalization of Western culture.
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Global Matters - Paul Jay
INTRODUCTION
The Transnational Turn in Literary Studies
Since the rise of critical theory in the 1970s, nothing has reshaped literary and cultural studies more than its embrace of transnationalism. It has productively complicated the nationalist paradigm long dominant in these fields, transformed the nature of the locations we study, and focused our attention on forms of cultural production that take place in the liminal spaces between real and imagined borders. This transformation has exploded under the forces of globalization, but it has its roots in political movements outside of the academy and theoretical developments within it that run back to the early 1960s. The civil rights movement and then later the women’s movement, the Chicana/o movement, and the gay and lesbian rights movement transformed the demographics of the student body and then the professoriate in U.S. higher education. These demographic changes brought a revolution in both the texts and the issues treated by scholars in literary and cultural studies. Work on women writers and African American, Latina/o, Native American, Asian American, gay, lesbian, and queer literatures transformed the curriculum of literature departments and the research agenda of its faculty in ways that dramatically reconfigured the historical and geographical boundaries of traditional practices. During the same period postcolonial studies emerged to challenge the primacy of discrete national literatures and what seemed like their insular concerns, providing a framework for studying literature and culture in a transnational context that moved beyond and explicitly questioned older Eurocentric models of comparative
analysis. However, the transnational turn in literary studies began in earnest when the study of minority, multicultural, and postcolonial literatures began to intersect with work done under the auspices of the emerging study of globalization.
This turn, of course, has been a controversial one. My aim in this book is to explore the nature and history of these controversies. As some scholars define globalization as a contemporary phenomenon linked to the development of electronic media, the rise of transnational corporations, global financial institutions, and proliferating forms of entertainment that easily leap national boundaries, others define it as a historical phenomenon running back to at least the sixteenth century and incorporating the histories of colonization, decolonization, and postcolonialism. Many insist that globalization is largely an economic and political phenomenon and that it therefore ought to be studied from a materialist point of view. Others maintain that globalization is a more broadly cultural phenomenon, and they draw on cultural theory in ways that are roundly criticized by those in the materialist camp.
There are also vigorous debates about the economic consequences of globalization and the impact it has on individual agency. Some see economic globalization as a rising tide that eventually will lift all boats, while others point to class inequities and the extent to which some countries, such as India, feel the benefits of globalization mainly in urban areas. Many scholars insist that globalization, characterized as it is by the exchange of cultural commodities central to the fashioning of identity and the exercise of social power, facilitates new forms of agency, while others lament what they see as the oppressively homogenizing effects of cultural globalization. Whereas scholars once ignored the role of gender in studying both the impact and benefits of globalization, over the last ten years gender has become a crucial object of analysis in the study of globalization. Finally, attention to the global flow of cash, cultural commodities, and media necessarily calls our attention to transnational contexts and locations of exchange, and some critics believe it does so in a way that can blind us to the nature of local circumstances, practices, and needs.
My goal in this book is to review and intervene in each of these debates. First of all, I challenge the idea that the transnational turn in literary and cultural studies can simply be linked to recent developments related to what we have come to call globalization.
In fact, this turn has roots that run back through theoretical developments in the humanities and social and political movements outside of the academy that began in the 1960s. In addition, I argue that it is a mistake to approach globalization itself as a contemporary phenomenon and that it makes much more sense to take a historical view in which globalization is dated as beginning in at least the sixteenth century and covering a time span that includes the long histories of imperialism, colonization, decolonization, and postcolonialism. This is both a historically sound approach to globalization and it has the practical benefit of historicizing literary and cultural studies, rescuing it from those who see globalization as a strictly contemporary or postmodern phenomenon.
Furthermore, in my view the debate over whether globalization is an economic or cultural phenomenon is based on a false distinction. We cannot neatly separate economic from cultural commodities; when commodities travel, culture travels, and when culture travels, commodities travel. Materialist critics are therefore wrong when they claim that a culturalist model is inappropriate for studying what is essentially an economic phenomenon. And, yet, cultural critics are also mistaken when they ignore the economic and material aspects of globalization. As for homogenization and agency, there are no such things as pure, autonomous cultures that are not contaminated,
as Kwame Appiah puts it, by productive contact with other cultures.¹ Indeed, homogenization
has emerged as something of a false villain in debates about globalization, in that similarity or uniformity is as much undone by contact with other cultures as it is enforced by it. The same can be said about agency, which is often linked to debates about homogenization. We tend to link agency to cultural autonomy and to measure cultural autonomy in terms of a society’s ability to protect its cultural identity from being watered down or erased by alien cultural forms; but every culture is always shaped by other cultures, and agency has more to do with the intelligent and imaginative negotiation of cross-cultural contact than with avoiding such contact. Agency from this point of view is a function of that negotiation, not its victim. And, clearly, agency is variously enabled and circumscribed by gender. The study of globalization both inside and outside of literary studies will not work without attention to this gender difference. As I point out in the chapters ahead, this was a problem in early studies of globalization that is being remedied by an increasing engagement between globalization studies and feminist studies.
Finally, I argue that the center-periphery model for the study of globalization (one that sees power, commodities, and influence flowing from urban centers in the West to a peripheral developing world) needs to be complicated. In fact, globalization is characterized by complex back-and-forth flows of people and cultural forms in which the appropriation and transformation of things—music, film, food, fashion—raise questions about the rigidity of the center-periphery model. While the institutional infrastructures of economic globalization still tend to be defined by this center-periphery model, emerging forms of agency at the cultural level are beginning to loosen its hold. And what we have increasingly come to recognize about the locations we study is that they are not fixed, static, or unchanging. We create the locations we study, and this recognition ought to encourage us to continue to remap the geographies of literary and cultural forms.
One claim that is often made against the changes ushered in by the transnational turn in literary studies is that it has led to a debilitating fragmentation. Principles of coherence that have guided the field for decades have given way to a focus on pluralities, differences, hybrid identities, and complicated transnational geographies that are seemingly incoherent and unmanageable. I do not agree, because I believe that literary studies as a field has always thrived on fragmentation and challenges to coherence. The field continually builds on the strength of new critical approaches and paradigm shifts, which may seem at first as though they are fragmenting the discipline when in fact they are renewing it. This is what has been happening as literary and cultural studies have taken a transnational turn; and in my view this turn is both a positive and an exciting one, promising new forms and expressions of coherence.
It is certainly true that the globalizing of literary studies challenges some traditional and often valuable practices in ways that have become controversial. It is no surprise that globalization studies, especially to the extent that they are associated with departments of English, are often seen as a threat to the already transnationalized fields of comparative literature or postcolonial studies. The relationship, for example, between globalization studies in English departments and postcolonial studies has been vexed. It is easy to misconstrue the argument that globalization has a long history that includes the epochs of imperialism, colonialism, decolonization, and postcolonialism as an attempt to discount or marginalize the importance of these historical processes, to replace focused attention on the specific histories of imperialism and colonialism with a more generalized but vague study of global flows of commodities and cultural forms. This is, I believe, a real danger, but I also think it is often based on misunderstanding—and in any case, it is an effect that can, and should, be avoided. If globalization offers a critical framework that moves the disciplines of literary and cultural studies toward a new transnational coherence, it will only do so if its relationship to postcolonial studies can be thought through in a responsible way.
With regard to a recurrent concern that scholars and critics in the field of English are trying to take over transnational approaches to the study of literature that are better left to comparatists, I want to be clear at the outset that although my book is primarily about the transnational turn in literary studies in English I am not arguing that English departments should have some kind of privileged position in the study of cultural and literary forms of globalization. Nor am I arguing that global literature
(however we choose to define that term) is primarily being written in English. The relationship of literary production to globalization is complex and multifaceted, irreducible by definition to literature produced in a particular language or constellation of nations. (Indeed, such a practice must acknowledge that much of the literature we study predates the formation of modern nation-states altogether.) To study this relationship requires the careful analysis across historical periods of a transnational range of writers in a variety of languages from a variety of perspectives.² Indeed, in the humanities we have historically had a number of different paradigms for studying literature in a transnational framework, principal among them being commonwealth studies, comparative literature, and postcolonial studies. While the first often focused much too narrowly on literature written in English in a colonialist context, the other two have covered literature written on every continent and in myriad languages from a point of view increasingly critical of colonialism and the kind of Eurocentrism informing early approaches to the comparative study of literature. Since the late 1990s, the discourses of multiculturalism, border studies, diaspora studies, and cosmopolitanism have been invoked in various ways to help underwrite a transnational approach to literary studies.
From this perspective, the discipline of English is in many ways a latecomer to the field of transnational literary studies. It was not until the developments I have sketched out that scholars and critics working in English departments began to think seriously about reorganizing areas of study in global rather than national contexts defined by conventional historical periods.³ My interest here is in tracking these developments. I want to explore the various social, economic, cultural, and political imperatives that have led to the creation of earlier transnational paradigms for the study of culture and literature in the humanities and to consider how they model approaches that can help inform work on globalization in English. Again, the aim here is not to assert the primacy of English in the study of globalization’s effects on culture and literature but to recognize that, like a number of other disciplines, English literature and those who study it have been profoundly affected by the processes of globalization.
Given this fact, I want to help develop a theoretical and methodological framework for studying these effects.⁴ In so doing I aim to question the default narrative for historicizing English,⁵ one in which the history of English and American literature is studied through the lens of conventional national histories, guided by the sometimes unconscious assumption that the history of these literatures began with the history of nations and with relatively little attention paid to the transnational forces at work in their production. I do not mean to discount the importance of national approaches to the study of English, but I do want to advocate other approaches based on a global reframing of the origins, production, and concerns of what we have called English
literature, to look closely at how the production of English literature itself has increasingly become transnational, and how it has become engaged with a set of issues related to globalization.
In the chapters that follow I review and, I hope, clarify many of the key issues in globalization studies that I have been discussing thus far. In addition, I examine a number of contemporary literary texts produced in the context of globalization in order to develop some models for the reading and analysis of fiction that are both a product of and engaged with the forces of globalization. The book is structured to emphasize this double focus. Whereas the chapters in part 1 deal with theoretical, critical, and institutional issues related to the transnational turn in literary studies, those in part 2 analyze a representative range of contemporary literary texts produced by a group of transnational writers whose fiction both represents the impact of globalization on the production of English and engages a range of issues related to the economic, social, cultural, and political forces globalization is unleashing.
The chapters in part 1 develop a thorough analysis of globalization and its relationship to historical forces that have contributed to the transnationalizing of literary studies in general and English literature in particular. In chapter 1 I argue that social movements outside the university that became linked to the rise of minority, multicultural, and postcolonial studies laid the groundwork for the transnationalizing of literary studies, and I survey the impact of globalization since at least the early 1990s on this trend and on the academy more generally. I explore, in particular, how developments in the field of literary criticism and theory spurred by the profession’s combined interests in the differences that locations, ethnicities, genders, race, and sexualities make in the production of identities and in the nature of experience have accelerated the discipline’s transnational turn. These changes have been controversial, and in this chapter I discuss some of the key controversies, analyze the positions of some important critics on both sides of the issues (including Bill Readings, Edward Said, Ania Loomba, Masao Miyoshi, Susan Stanford Friedman, Arjun Appadurai, and Kwame Appiah), and provide something of a road map for negotiating their concerns.
In chapter 2 I step back from these debates in order to sift through a competing set of answers to the question, what is globalization? I explore the evolution in the West of globalization as an academic field of study, beginning as it did among economists, political scientists, and sociologists before migrating later to literary and cultural studies. One of the key questions here has to do with how we historicize globalization. I review competing positions taken by critics such as Roland Robertson and Malcolm Waters, who argue that globalization has a long history, and others such as Anthony Giddens and David Harvey, who insist it is a contemporary phenomenon. I argue that the long historical perspective taken by Robertson and Giddens is more accurate and offers a better framework for the study of globalization in both the humanities and social sciences. I connect these general debates about the historical character of globalization to the more specific and pressing question of how colonialism, decolonization, and the experience of postcoloniality are related to globalization. The whole question of how we ought to reconcile these historical epochs, and what the relationship ought to be between postcolonial and globalization studies, is a vexing one, and critics have taken a range of positions on the problem, from Simon During’s insistence that globalization theory can be a tool for redescribing the entire history of colonization, decolonization, and postcoloniality to Masao Miyoshi’s insistence that globalization as both a socioeconomic process and a field of study can only have a corrupting influence on work in the humanities and social sciences. I agree here that Miyoshi’s position ought to give us pause. He is certainly right that we must scrutinize the university’s complicity with the forces of global capital if we want to insure that our work contributes to, and does not inadvertently work against, social justice; and he is right that more attention must be paid to the debilitating effects of globalization on the economies and environments of postcolonial countries. We also need to guard against facile approaches to the study of cultural globalization that tend to simply celebrate diversity and hybridity without thinking critically enough about its effects. That said, I also argue that During is fundamentally correct in seeing globalization as a long historical process and that we have to include as central to that history the whole arc of imperialism, colonization, decolonization, and postcoloniality. In doing so we need to be careful to foreground these histories as absolutely central to the evolution of globalization, avoiding a position that seems to privilege some amorphous (and teleological) concept of global change
over one that treats colonialism and its aftermath as the driving force of globalization.
In chapter 3 I turn my attention to debates over whether globalization ought to be studied as an economic or a cultural phenomenon. While there are critics, such as Miyoshi and H. D. Harootunian, who insist that globalization ought to be treated as a wholly economic process using a thoroughly materialist methodology purged of culturalism, others, such as Appadurai, Appiah, and James Clifford insist on the fundamentally reciprocal relationship between economic and cultural forms of globalization and argue for a more syncretic model of analysis that tends to privilege culturalist models. Here I argue that while we need to make distinctions between cultural and economic processes and conditions, and that we need to be careful to distinguish between the semiotic, representational, and imaginary on the one hand and the lived reality of material and economic relations on the other, economic and cultural systems have become so intertwined that it makes little sense to advocate for a strictly materialist or a strictly culturalist model for studying the effects of globalization. From this perspective, both sides share some blame in creating an overly schematic or one-sided approach to the study of globalization. If contemporary theory influenced by deconstruction has taught us anything, it is that the binary division between the economic and the cultural is a false one, that we need to interrogate how each term is constructed in contrast to the other and how the binary tends to mask a much more complicated set of processes than either term by itself can reference.
In chapter 4, the final chapter in part 1, I explore how the transnational turn in literary studies has resulted in a wholesale remapping of the locations we study. This remapping has grown out of a focus on migration and cross-cultural experience, generally, and a particular interest in tracing complicated histories of displacement. In the United States this has led scholars in African, Asian, Native American, and Latina/o literary and cultural studies to turn what used to be a narrow U.S. focus into a hemispheric and even global one (the United States, Canada, Mexico, the Caribbean, Latin America, Africa, and the Pacific Rim
), so that the locations that now come under the rubric of American studies
have become transnational. Likewise, the study of British
literature has moved productively away from a narrow focus on the British Isles, Western Europe, and the United States to include the histories and geographies of former British colonies (South Asian, African, New World) and the back-and-forth movement of people between them. These changes have had the salutary effect of helping us recognize that we create the spaces we study. I argue that as scholars and critics complicate the traditional attention we pay to nation-state locations by focusing our attention on transnational spaces and regions, we need to develop a clear sense of the constructedness of these regions. Rob Wilson presents a compelling model for this kind of work with his concept of critical regionalism, and I use it as my point of departure for an extended analysis of how work in the field of border studies in the Americas can provide a model for how to remap the geographical spaces of literary and cultural studies. In this context I find Paul Gilroy’s conceptualizing of the black Atlantic
particularly useful, and so I present an extended discussion of how his work on the Atlantic slave trade and its relationship to modernity can be usefully linked to the work of Mexican and Latin American theorists such as Edmundo O’Gorman, Nestor Canclini, and Edouard Glissant to produce a hemispheric approach to the literatures and cultures of the Americas.
The chapters in part 2 are designed to examine how a range of contemporary transnational writers working in English are using their fiction to explore the issues treated by the critics discussed in part 1. Taken together, these chapters present some models for how we can begin to deal critically—and in the classroom—with new literary works that embody the transnational turn in English. The texts I discuss in these chapters deal in various ways with the historical, social, and political forces at work shaping personal and cultural identity in transnationalized spaces from the Caribbean to London to South Asia under the combined historical effects of colonization, decolonization, postcoloniality, and globalization. These kinds of texts are transforming the scope of the national literatures to which they belong and pushing beyond national boundaries to imagine the global character of modern experience, contemporary culture, and the identities they produce. They document the transnationalizing of English literature, but more important, they engage the complex range of critical and theoretical issues discussed in part 1. That is, they reflect the globalization of English as a mode of literary production, but they also reflect on the historical, political, social, cultural, and personal issues of concern to critics.
In chapter 5 I begin by looking at three contemporary novels by South Asian writers—Arundhati Roy’s The God of Small Things (1997), Vikram Chandra’s Red Earth and Pouring Rain (1995), and Mohsin Hamid’s Moth Smoke (2000). These three novels model in different ways the kind of dialectical relationship between colonialism, decolonization, postcolonialism, and globalization I insist in part 1 ought to inform the study of transnational literatures and cultures. Roy’s novel contains a running critique of the effects of globalization in India, but it does not link those effects historically to colonialism in the kind of systematic way we find in Chandra’s novel, which draws a clear line between the two histories. Hamid, on the other hand, tries to draw a clear distinction between the postcolonial condition and globalization, insisting that he belongs to a generation of post–postcolonial
writers. Analyzing these novels together I draw attention to the challenge of treating categories such as the local and the global, the personal and the historical, and the cultural and the economic as if they represented fixed distinctions. Roy’s novel in particular, with its contrast between the gods of big and small things, also suggests the difficulty of creating a totalizing historical view that does not, at the same time, take account of the local, the particular, and the personal. In this chapter I show how, taken together, these three novels dramatize why we cannot discuss postcolonial literature in isolation from the phenomenon of globalization and, conversely, that it is impossible to study globalization without dealing with complex local histories of colonialism and postcolonialism.
Roy, Chandra, and Hamid each write to some degree about characters who move back and forth between the East and the West, foregrounding forms of disruption, displacement, migration, and mobility caused by colonization, decolonization, and globalization. In chapter 6 I analyze a novel whose narrative structure is carefully calibrated to explore this kind of fluidity of movement across borders, Kiran Desai’s The Inheritance of Loss (2006). Desai’s novel contains two interrelated narratives. One is set in New York City and explores the contemporary effects of globalization on a group of diasporic migrant workers in a city that could be almost anywhere, while the alternating chapters, set in Kalimpong in West Bengal, analyze the persistent effects of colonialism on local ethnic conflicts with deep historical roots in the far north of what is now India. Desai’s novel is particularly compelling, I argue, for the way in which it foregrounds how nationalism and globalization coexist even as globalization seems to be accelerating in different ways in multiple locations. In The Inheritance of Loss nationalism is not withering away under the effects of globalization but asserting itself in the face of the changes ushered in by globalization, and in ways that are connected to changes set in motion generations ago by colonialism. The links she draws between the experiences of migrant workers in New York City and nationalist revolutionaries in Kalimpong works to complicate our understanding of the relationship between nationalism and globalization and the extent to which they feed off each other, and they stress the uneven effects of economic globalization in places such as Kalimpong and New York. Desai’s novel, moreover, focuses on the challenges faced by global migrant workers in metropolitan centers like New York in a way that questions the relatively upbeat vision of globalization’s liberatory possibilities of a critic such as Appadurai. It draws a clear link between forms of cultural colonization under colonialism and globalization, while insisting in its treatment of nationalism in northeastern India that an obsession with cultural purity and anti-Westernization can be as debilitating as colonialism itself. (The novel is as critical of nationalism as it is of globalization.)
In chapter 7 I analyze how Zakes Mda’s postapartheid South African novel published in 2000, The Heart of Redness, stages an elaborate and multileveled debate about tradition and modernization in the overlapping eras of colonialism and contemporary globalization. The novel explores both the cultural politics of identity in a newly liberated urban Johannesburg and struggles related to modernization in the villages of rural South Africa. Here the kind of mobility Desai explores is embodied in Mda’s protagonist, Camagu, who has returned to a newly liberated South Africa after thirty years in the West. Camagu’s journey from the United States to Johannesburg, and then to a historically important village near the sea, sets the stage for his exploration of how tensions around economic development and cultural preservation in the late twentieth century are linked historically to colonialism. I connect Mda’s treatment of these issues with those of the critics discussed in part 1 (particularly Appadurai and Appiah) and explore how Mda’s focus on the relationship between the political and the romantic, between eros and ecology, link the personal and the political in ways we can observe in a number of the novels I treat in this book.
The novel I discuss in chapter 8, Zadie Smith’s White Teeth (2000), also deals with forms of displacement, migration, and mobility characteristic of colonization, postcolonization, and globalization, but it locates the intersecting effects of such movement in contemporary London and particularly explores multiculturalism and fundamentalism as two competing responses to the kind of diversity these forms of mobility produce. I analyze Smith’s approach to the construction of personal and cultural identity in a mixed group of South Asian, Caribbean, and Anglo Londoners. In Smith’s novel the colonial machinery has gone into reverse. The mobility of the colonizer has become the mobility of the colonized, as they retrace the journeys of those who conquered their ancestors. With the descendents of those dislocated by colonial conquest having relocated to the very center of colonial power, it is Englishness, not indigenousness, that is at stake. White Teeth traces the construction of postcolonial subjectivities among its South Asian and Caribbean characters in the colonizing metropolis, but it also is about how the complex forces it explores are remaking Englishness. I argue that Smith’s novel transcends the categories of British
or postcolonial
fiction. She draws from these two traditions, but her novel has its roots in the hybrid mix of Asian and Caribbean cultural forms that have emerged in London and elsewhere since the late 1980s. Of particular importance is her critical engagement with multiculturalism as a strategy for dealing with difference in a contemporary and increasingly hybridized city like London, and how she contrasts this strategy with forms of fundamentalism emergent in the last decade of the twentieth century.
The book’s final chapter is devoted to Junot Díaz’s 2007 Pulitzer Prize–winning novel, The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao. Although Díaz is routinely treated as an American or a Latino writer, I insist on linking his novel to the transnational turn in English in order to underscore how it deals with a range of issues explored by Desai, Smith, and the other novelists I discuss. All of these novels are about mobility and displacement and thus shift the reader between multiple locations, engaging a new model of migration characterized by the back-and-forth movement of people across borders, at once insisting on the importance of location and deterritorializing the spaces in which their characters operate. In Díaz’s novel we move back and forth between the eastern United States and the Dominican Republic, and between the years of Rafael Trujillo’s dictatorship in the Dominican Republic (especially between the years 1942 and 1961) and the contemporary life of Díaz’s young characters growing up in Patterson, New Jersey, in the 1980s and 1990s. I show how both the generational structure of the novel and the ways in which it shuttles between locations mirrors literary and narrative devices used in both The Inheritance of Loss and White