Skip to main content
Worlding a Peripheral Literature


Author: Marko Juvan
Year: 2019


Bringing together the analyses of the literary world-system, translation studies, and the research of European cultural nationalism, this book contests the view that texts can be attributed global importance irrespective of their origin, language, and position in the international book market. Focusing on Slovenian literature, almost unknown to world literature studies, this book addresses world literature’s canonical function in the nineteenth-century process of establishing European letters as national literatures. Aware of their dependence on imperial powers, (semi)peripheral national movements sought international recognition through, among other things, the newly invented figure of the national poet. Writers central to dependent national communities were canonized to represent their respective cultures to the norm-giving Other – the emerging world literary canon and its aesthetic ideology. Hence, national literatures asserted their linguo-cultural individuality through the process of worlding; that is, by their positioning in the international literary world informed by the supposed universality of the aesthetic.



More ...

Maria Chiorean: Review; Metacritic Journal for Comparative Studies and Theory, July 2021 (7/1).

Anton Pokrivčák, Miloš Zelenka: Světová literatura v diskusi. Slavica litteraria 23, št. 2 (2020), str. 181–183.

Tjaša Škorjanc: Mitologizacija nacionalnega pesnika v sebstvu svetovne literature. Časopis za kritiko znanosti 44, št. 282 (2021), str. 309–14.

Irina Stakhanova: Marko Juvan, Worlding a Peripheral Literature. Slovene Studies 42, št. 2 (2020), str. 196–199.



price
for sale in the bookshop Azil


Keywords
comparative literature
cultural nationalism
globalization
literary science
national literature
national poet
Slovene literature
world literary system
world literature




Options

Add to favorites

Print

Send by e-mail

QR