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This pathbreaking collection explores a new concept in world literature studies. Going beyond the binary opposition of "major" and "minor" literatures, the ultraminor encompasses the literatures of smaller but vibrant regional and linguistic communities. Using cases as varied as the literatures of Malta, Mauritius, and the Faroe Islands, contemporary Nahuatl novels, Kafka in Prague, and Shakespeare in Naples, the ten essays in this volume take up questions of scale and circulation, the interplay of languages and dialects, and ultraminor writers' resistance to translation and their reliance on…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This pathbreaking collection explores a new concept in world literature studies. Going beyond the binary opposition of "major" and "minor" literatures, the ultraminor encompasses the literatures of smaller but vibrant regional and linguistic communities. Using cases as varied as the literatures of Malta, Mauritius, and the Faroe Islands, contemporary Nahuatl novels, Kafka in Prague, and Shakespeare in Naples, the ten essays in this volume take up questions of scale and circulation, the interplay of languages and dialects, and ultraminor writers' resistance to translation and their reliance on it. Ultraminor World Literatures will be of interests to students and scholars of comparative and world literature and to anyone concerned with the ongoing life of unique cultural communities around the world.
Autorenporträt
Bergur Rønne Moberg (PhD University of Copenhagen, 2004) is an Associate Professor of Nordic Studies and Linguistics at University of Copenhagen. He has published widely on Scandinavian, Faroese and Icelandic literature and culture, including the book Resten i Vesten. Verdenslitteratur i modernismens margin (2014, The Rest in the West. World Literature in the Margin of Literature), forthcoming in German in 2023. David Damrosch (PhD Yale, 1980) is Ernest Bernbaum Professor of Comparative Literature at Harvard University and director of Harvard's Institute for World Literature. He is author or editor of two dozen books, including What Is World Literature? (2003), Comparing the Literatures: Literary Studies in a Global Age (2020), and Around the World in 80 Books (2021).