ABSTRACT

Without readers and audiences, viewers and consumers, the postcolonial would be literally unthinkable. And yet, postcolonial critics have historically neglected the modes of reception and consumption that make up the politics, and pleasures of meaning-making during and after empire. Thus, while recent criticism and theory has made large claims for reading; as an ethical act; as a means of establishing collective, quasi-political consciousness; as identification with difference; as a mode of resistance; and as an impulsion to the public imagination, the reader in postcolonial literary studies persists as a shadowy figure. This collection answers the now pressing need for a distinctively postcolonial take on the rapidly expanding area of reader and reception studies. Written by some of the top scholars in the field, these essays reveal readers and reception to be varied and profoundly unstable subjects that challenge many of our assumptions and preconceptions of the postcolonial – from the notion of reading as national fellowship to the demands of an ethics of reading.

part |45 pages

Real Readers/Actual Audiences

chapter |16 pages

The Politics of Postcolonial Laughter

The International Reception of the New Zealand Animated Comedy Series bro'Town 1

chapter |13 pages

“Bollywood” Adolescents

Young Viewers Discuss Class, Representation and Hindi Films

part |41 pages

Readers and Publishers

chapter |13 pages

Does the North Read the South?

The International Reception of South African Scholarly Texts

chapter |13 pages

William Plomer Reading

The Publisher's Reader at Jonathan Cape

chapter |13 pages

Too Much Rushdie, Not Enough Romance?

The UK Publishing Industry and BME (Black Minority Ethnic) Readership

part |41 pages

Reading and Nationalism

chapter |13 pages

Reading After Terror

The Reluctant Fundamentalist and First-World Allegory

chapter |12 pages

“Macaulay's Children”

Thomas Babington Macaulay and the Imperialism of Reading in India

part |48 pages

Reading and Postcolonial Ethics

chapter |12 pages

Theorising Postcolonial Reception

Writing, Reading and Moral Agency in the Satanic Verses Affair 1

chapter |11 pages

Reading before the Law *

Melville's ‘Bartleby’ and Asylum Seeker Narratives