Tales of Unsettlement: The Global Novel in the Age of Refugees

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@ 3:30 pm - 5:00 pm

Migrants arrive near Skala, on the Greek island of Lesbos, on November 16, 2015.B. Venkat Mani

Senior Race, Ethnicity, and Indigeneity Fellow (2021-2025)

Evjue Bascom Professor of the Humanities, German, Nordic, and Slavic+; DAAD Center for German and European Studies; Center for South Asia; IRIS (Institute for Regional and International Studies); Center for the History of Print and Digital Cultures, UW–Madison

Tales of Unsettlement: The Global Novel in the Age of Refugees

Tales of Unsettlement is a study of refugees in contemporary literature. My book underlines the centrality of refugees in the making of a new “global” novel, which is multi-locational, multidirectional, and multi-temporal. Discussing novels from Afghanistan, India, Iraq, Sri Lanka, Syria, Germany, and the US, my book pursues multilingual comparative investigations of the genre’s aesthetic and political charge. Starting in the 1940s and ending in the current period—two eras marked by refugees—I argue that studying the figure of the refugee is vital for uncovering histories of racist populism and ethnonationalism on a global scale.

B. Venkat Mani is Professor of German and World Literature. He is the author of Cosmopolitical Claims (2007) and Recoding World Literature (2017; winner of German Studies Association’s DAAD Prize; Modern Language Associations’ Aldo and Jeanne Scaglione Award for best book in German Studies). He has (co-)edited several volumes including A Companion to World Literature (Wiley Blackwell 2020; finalist, American Association of Publishers’ Prose Award). His work on racial, ethnic, and religious minorities with a focus on migration has also appeared in the Journal of World LiteraturePMLAProfessionGerman QuarterlyGegenwartsliteraturThe Wire (Hindi), Inside Higher Ed, and Telos. Previous fellowships and grants include Mellon-Sawyer Seminar Grant, Alexander von Humboldt Experienced Researcher Fellowship, Title VI Grant for Center for South Asia, and residential fellowship at the Leibniz Center for Literary and Cultural Studies, Berlin. Mani also served as Diversity Liaison for the Division of Diversity, Equity & Educational Achievement.

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