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Peripheral urbanism, imperial maturity, and the crisis of development in Lao She’s Rickshaw and Mulk Raj Anand’s Coolie
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Vandertop, Caitlin (2019) Peripheral urbanism, imperial maturity, and the crisis of development in Lao She’s Rickshaw and Mulk Raj Anand’s Coolie. Novel: A Forum on Fiction, 52 (3). pp. 369-385. doi:10.1215/00295132-7738542 ISSN 0029-5132.
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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1215/00295132-7738542
Abstract
The theory of combined and uneven development has provided a new interpretive framework for studies of the novel in recent years, opening up connections between the central premise that capitalism produces an “amalgam of archaic with more contemporary forms” and modernist experiments with narrative time. This article locates antidevelopmental narratives in the uneven culture of the peripheral metropolis, focusing on two twentieth-century urban novels: Lao She's Rickshaw (1936–37) and Mulk Raj Anand's Coolie (1936). Tracing the journeys of migrant workers engaged in informal labor in Peking (Beijing) and Bombay (Mumbai), respectively, the novels juxtapose the visual cultures of colonial modernization with everyday, arresting experiences of poverty and precarity on the city streets. In staging the untimely deaths of their rickshaw-pulling protagonists, they not only interrupt individual developmental trajectories but also challenge the progressive telos underpinning discourses of “imperial maturity” in their respective cities. Central to this challenge is the rickshaw itself, as both a symbol of uneven development and a vehicle that literally and metaphorically drags the protagonists back, bringing an abrupt end to the journey to maturity and, consequently, to the narrative arc of the bildungsroman. In this way, the novels' proto-postcolonial formal interventions are grounded in the visible unevenness of their urban settings.
Item Type: | Journal Article | ||||||
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Subjects: | P Language and Literature > PN Literature (General) P Language and Literature > PN Literature (General) > PN0080 Criticism |
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Divisions: | Faculty of Arts > English and Comparative Literary Studies | ||||||
Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH): | Bildungsromans -- History and criticism , Urbanization in literature, Colonies in literature , Modernism (Literature) -- History and criticism, Literature and society -- History -- 20th century | ||||||
Journal or Publication Title: | Novel: A Forum on Fiction | ||||||
Publisher: | Duke University Press | ||||||
ISSN: | 0029-5132 | ||||||
Official Date: | 1 November 2019 | ||||||
Dates: |
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Volume: | 52 | ||||||
Number: | 3 | ||||||
Page Range: | pp. 369-385 | ||||||
DOI: | 10.1215/00295132-7738542 | ||||||
Status: | Peer Reviewed | ||||||
Publication Status: | Published | ||||||
Access rights to Published version: | Restricted or Subscription Access | ||||||
Copyright Holders: | Copyright © 2019 by Caitlin Vandertop | ||||||
Date of first compliant deposit: | 30 September 2019 | ||||||
Date of first compliant Open Access: | 30 September 2019 | ||||||
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