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Pacific Literatures as World Literature is a conjuration of trans-Pacific poets and writers whose work enacts forces of "becoming oceanic" and suggests a different mode of understanding, viewing, and belonging to the world. The Pacific, past and present, remains uneasily amenable to territorial demarcations of national or marine sovereignty. At the same time, as a planetary element necessary to sustaining life and well-being, the Pacific could become the means to envisioning ecological solidarity, if compellingly framed in terms that elicit consent and inspire an imagination of co-belonging and care. The Pacific can signify a bioregional site of coalitional promise as much as a danger zone of antagonistic peril.
With ground-breaking writings from authors based in North America, Japan, Taiwan, Korea, Hawaii, and Guam and new modes of research - including multispecies ethnography and practice, ecopoetics, and indigenous cosmopolitics - authors explore the socio-political significance of the Pacific and contribute to the development of a collective effort of comparative Pacific studies covering a refreshingly broad, ethnographically grounded range of research themes. This volume aims to decenter continental/land poetics as such via long-standing transnational Pacific ties, re-worlding Pacific literature as world literature.Hsinya Huang is Distinguished Professor of American and Comparative Literature, National Sun Yat-Sen University (NSYSU), Taiwan. Her publications include (De)Colonizing the Body: Disease, Empire, and (Alter)Native Medicine in Contemporary Native American Women's Writings (2004), Native North American Literatures: Reflections on Multiculturalism (2009), Aspects of Transnational and Indigenous Cultures (2014), Chinese Railroad Workers: Recovery and Representation (2017), and Diaspora, Memory, and Resurgence: Trans-pacific Indigenous Writing and Practice (2022).
Chia-hua Lin is a Ph.D. Candidate in the English Department of the University of Hawai'i at Manoa, USA. She is the recipient of the 2018 Fulbright Graduate Study Grant, the 2020 Government Scholarship to Study Abroad (GSSA) from the Taiwanese Ministry of Education, and the 2023 Taiwanese Overseas Pioneers (TOP) Grants from the National Science and Technology Council. She currently serves as the secretary of the Asia Pacific Observatory of Humanities for the Environment (HfE) Global Network.Thanks for subscribing!
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