In an age pervaded by global crises and planetary concerns, the Anglophone novel is undergoing significant transformations – as are the theoretical vantage points from which literary scholars study literature. This handbook aims to establish a decidedly transnational and global perspective on the contemporary novel in English. In addition to offering frameworks for theorising Anglophone literature (postcolonial studies, world literary studies, new sociological approaches, and more), it surveys (trans)cultural contexts of Anglophone fiction, literary responses to global concerns, and new novelistic forms as well as transformations of established genres.
                
                Addressing students, professors, and literary scholars alike, the volume explores the following key questions: What are the dominant themes and topics of 21st-century Anglophone novels? Which cultural dynamics have impacted the development of Anglophone fiction, roughly over the past two decades? How can we link these developments to the genre of the novel with its European legacies? What authors – from all parts of the globe – have shaped the Anglophone literary field? Which works are among the most significant novels of the new millennium so far, and how have they altered and propelled our very notion of ‘the Anglophone novel’? What new forms of the novel have emerged in recent years, and how have established genres been transformed to negotiate transnational concerns? How can we read contemporary novels as articulations of both local and global narratives? Providing multifaceted answers to these and several other questions, the chapters in this handbook offer different models for investigating the contemporary Anglophone novel on a transnational plane.
                
                TABLE OF CONTENTS
                
                I. THE CONTEMPORARY ANGLOPHONE NOVEL IN THEORY
                
                1. ALEXANDER SCHERR, NADIA BUTT & ANSGAR NÜNNING
                
                Fictions of Transculturality in an Age of Global Connectivity: The Anglophone Novel in the Twenty-First Century	11
                
                2. ALEXANDER SCHERR
                
                The World of the Contemporary Anglophone Novel: Sociological Approaches to Twenty-First-Century Literature	31
                
                II. TRANSCULTURAL IDENTITIES, GLOBAL FORMS OF TRAVEL, AND NEW ENCOUNTERS
                
                3. HANNA TEICHLER
                
                Transcultural Memory and Transoceanic Entanglements in Abdulrazak Gurnah’s 
                Paradise
                 (1994) and Amitav Ghosh’s 
                The Ibis Trilogy
                 (2008-2015)	55
                
                4. STEFANIE KEMMERER & PAVAN KUMAR MALREDDY
                
                Contemporary Arab Novels in English: Political Resistance in the City Spaces of Arab Spring Novels by Saleem Haddad and Omar Robert Hamilton	69
                
                5. CAROLIN GEBAUER
                
                Reframing Migration in a Globalised World: Representations of Mobility in Dina Nayeri’s 
                Refuge
                 (2017) and Xiaolu Guo’s 
                A Lover’s Discourse
                 (2020)	83
                
                6. MAGDALENA PFALZGRAF
                
                World Literary Citizenship in Anglophone African Novels: Self-Perception and Afropolitan Globality in Sefi Atta’s 
                A Bit of Difference
                 (2012) and Valerie Tagwira’s 
                Trapped
                 (2020)	101
                
                7. MARION GYMNICH
                
                Speaking English in the Global World: Multilingualism and Translation in Nnedi Okorafor’s 
                Akata Witch
                 (2011) and Alexis Wright’s 
                The Swan Book
                 (2013)	119
                
                III. GLOBAL CONCERNS IN THE TWENTY-FIRST-CENTURY ANGLOPHONE NOVEL
                
                8. KYLIE CRANE
                
                Flows and Eddies of the Anthropocene in Anglophone Novels: Helon Habila’s 
                Oil on Water
                 (2010) and Monique Roffey’s 
                Archipelago
                 (2012)	137
                
                9. MELISSA KENNEDY
                
                Critiquing Capitalism: The Neoliberal Self-Help Entrepreneur in Aravind Adiga’s 
                The White Tiger
                 (2008) and Rahul Kanakia’s 
                Enter Title Here
                 (2016)	153
                
                10. GIGI ADAIR
                
                Queer Diasporic Bodies, Caribbean Urbanity, and Global Flows: Shani Mootoo’s 
                Valmiki’s Daughter
                 (2008) and Oonya Kempadoo’s 
                All Decent Animals
                 (2013)	169
                
                11. ROMAN BARTOSCH
                
                Multispecies Fictions: Love and Loss Beyond the Human in Zakes Mda’s 
                The Whale Caller
                 (2005) and Henrietta Rose-Innes’ 
                Green Lion
                 (2015)	185
                
                IV. NEW NARRATIVE FORMS AND TRANSFORMATIONS OF GENRES
                
                12. JAN RUPP
                
                From Fictions of Migration to Refugee Literature: Caryl Phillips’ 
                A Distant Shore
                 (2003) and Mohsin Hamid’s 
                Exit West
                 (2017)	203
                
                13. LARS ECKSTEIN
                
                Plural Worlds: Decolonial Realism in Marlon James’ 
                The Book of Night Women
                 (2009) and Alexis Wright’s 
                Carpentaria
                 (2006) 	219
                
                14. ALEXANDRA EFFE
                
                Hybrid Fiction-Nonfiction Storytelling: Speaking Positions Between Documentary, Criticism, Autobiography, and Fiction in J. M. Coetzee’s 
                Elizabeth Costello
                 (2003) and Teju Cole’s 
                Every Day Is for the Thief
                 (2014 [2007]) 	235
                
                15. ANNA TABOURATZIDIS
                
                Globalised Dystopias: Precarious Futures in Emily St. John Mandel’s 
                Station Eleven
                 (2014) and Ling Ma’s 
                Severance
                 (2018)	251
                
                16. ANYA HEISE-VON DER LIPPE
                
                Canadian Indigenous Gothic: Waubgeshig Rice’s 
                Moon of the Crusted Snow
                 (2018), Cherie Dimaline’s 
                Empire of Wild
                 (2019), and Eden Robinson’s 
                Son of a Trickster
                 (2017) 	267
                
                17. NADIA BUTT & MICHELLE STORK
                
                The Anglophone Road Novel: Moving Memories, Histories, and Identities in Jamal Mahjoub’s 
                Travelling with Djinns
                 (2003) and Bernardine Evaristo’s 
                Soul Tourists
                 (2005) 	283
        
    
    
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