Writing the Global Riot: Literature in a Time of Crisis
Writing the Global Riot: Literature in a Time of Crisis
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Abstract
The history of the modern riot parallels the development of the modern novel and the modern lyric. Yet there has been no sustained attempt to trace or theorize the various ways writers over time and in different contexts have shaped cultural perceptions of the riot as a distinctive form of political and social expression. Through a focus on questions of voice, massing, and mediation, this collection is the first cross-cultural study of the interrelatedness of a prevalent mode of political and economic protest and the variable styles of writing that riots have inspired. This volume will provide historical depth and cultural nuance, as well as examine more recent theoretical attempts to understand the resurgence of rioting in a time of unprecedented global uncertainty. One of the key contentions of this collection is that literature has done far more than merely record or register riotous practices. Rather literature has, in variable ways, used them as raw material to stimulate and accelerate its own formal development and critical responsiveness. For some writers this has manifested in a move away from classical norms of propriety and accord, and towards a more openly contingent, chaotic, and unpredictable scenography and cast of dramatis personae, while others have moved towards narrative realism or, more recently, digital media platforms to manifest the crises that riots unleash. Keenly attuned to these formal variations, the chapters in this collection analyse literature’s fraught dialogue with the histories of violence that are bound up in the riot as an inherently volatile form of collective action.
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Front Matter
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Introduction
Writing and Rioting: Literature in Times of Crisis
Jumana Bayeh and others
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1
Tumultum Populi: Riots, Noise, and Speech Acts in Georgian England
Ian Haywood
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2
I Would They Were Barbarians: Shakespeare, Brecht, and the Global Riot
Mark Steven
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3
Bloody Sundays: Radical Rewriting and the Trafalgar Riot of 1887
Helen Groth
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4
Rhodes Must Fall, Ulysses, and the Politics of Teaching Modernism
Cóilín Parsons
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5
Buzz, Mob, Crowd, Life: Writing the Riot in Mulk Raj Anand’s Untouchable and Virginia Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway
J. Daniel Elam
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6
Riotous Nations: Time and the Short Story of Partition
Rashmi Varma
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7
A Sketch of the Mob
Joseph North
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8
Phantom Justice and Orwellian Violence: Writing against Erasure in a Turbulent Hong Kong
Janny H. C. Leung
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9
The Crowd in This Moment: Troubling the Immanence of Riots in Contemporary US Literature
Julian Murphet
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10
‘If I write a Love poem it’s against the police’: The Abolitionist Poetics of the Riot
Andrew Brooks andAstrid Lorange
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11
Mobilizing the History of Protest and Dissent in Post-2011 Moroccan Novels
Karima Laachir
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12
From ‘Jihadi City’ to ‘Bride of the Revolution’: The Protest Rhythms of Tripoli
Caroline Rooney
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13
Taming ‘the Square’: Documenting the Rioting Subject in Basma Abdel Aziz’s The Queue
Rita Sakr
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14
Mediating the Arab Spring’s Riots: Reclaiming Egypt’s Lost Archive
Jumana Bayeh
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End Matter
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