Toward de-exceptionalizing migration : intra-African diasporic writing in South Africa

dc.contributor.authorFasselt, Rebecca
dc.contributor.emailrebecca.fasselt@up.ac.zaen_US
dc.date.accessioned2023-11-29T12:26:00Z
dc.date.issued2022-09
dc.description.abstractMigration has never before occupied such a prominent place in African cultural production as it does today. Yet, notwithstanding an increasing focus on intra-African migration in the social sciences, literary migration scholarship has largely focused on African migration to the West, as the growing body of studies on outward-oriented Afropolitan migration novels indicates. In this paper, I examine how the Afropolitan consciousness that structures South-North migration novels is reframed in literature of continental migration and mobility in post-Marikana South Africa. While the themes of xenophobia and migration have emerged as central preoccupations in South African literature from the early 2000s onward, there has been a shift in literary production more recently with the publication of a range of works by African diasporic writers in South Africa. Drawing on Ekow Duker’s Yellowbone (2019), Rémy Ngamije’s The Eternal Audience of One (2019), and Sue Nyathi’s The Gold Diggers (2018), I argue that these texts interrogate South Africa’s complex relationship to “Africanness” and forge new pathways for continental dialogue that allow us to resituate South African-based writing within larger debates in contemporary African literary studies. This category of intra-African diasporic fiction calls into question simplifying binaries of outward, Western-oriented African writing and locally produced popular, yet internationally disregarded, texts (Harris). Rather, it scrutinizes the idea of “Africa” in global literary circuits from the position of intra-African diasporic subjectivities. Drawing attention to the long history of intra-African mobilities, the cross-continental thrust in many of these works also productively speaks to recent scholarly efforts to reframe migration studies in ways that insist on the de-exceptionalization of migration and the breakdown of binary formulations of migrant and non-migrant identities.en_US
dc.description.departmentEnglishen_US
dc.description.embargo2024-03-23
dc.description.librarianam2023en_US
dc.description.sdgNoneen_US
dc.description.urihttps://iupress.org/journals/ralen_US
dc.identifier.citationFasselt, R. 2022, 'Toward de-exceptionalizing migration : intra-African diasporic writing in South Africa', Research in African Literatures, vol. 53, no. 1, pp. 153-175. DOI : 10.2979/reseafrilite.53.1.10en_US
dc.identifier.issn0034-5210 (print)
dc.identifier.issn1527-2044 (online)
dc.identifier.other10.2979/reseafrilite.53.1.10
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2263/93543
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherIndiana University Pressen_US
dc.rights© 2023 The Trustees of Indiana University.en_US
dc.subjectMigrationen_US
dc.subjectIntra-African migrationen_US
dc.subjectLiterary migration scholarshipen_US
dc.subjectWesten_US
dc.titleToward de-exceptionalizing migration : intra-African diasporic writing in South Africaen_US
dc.typeArticleen_US

Files

Original bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
Fasselt_Toward_2022.pdf
Size:
370.04 KB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format
Description:
Article

License bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
license.txt
Size:
1.71 KB
Format:
Item-specific license agreed upon to submission
Description: