Preface and Acknowledgements .................................................................................. vii
ELIZABETH KOVACH, IMKE POLLAND AND ANSGAR NÜNNING Introduction: Towards a New Formalism? Conceptual and Theoretical Explorations ..................................................................... 1
I. THE CULTURAL WORK OF FORMS IN ANGLO-AMERICAN LITERATURE FROM THE EARLY MODERN TO THE VICTORIAN PERIOD
KATHRIN BETHKE Love’s Accountants: Double-Entry Bookkeeping and the Sonnet Form in Early Modern England ......................................................... 25
CHRISTINE SCHWANECKE Worlds of Sighs, Stories, and Music: The Cultural Work of Alter-Generic and Intermedial Forms in Jacobean Tragedy ................................... 41
SIJIE WANG Conflictive Forms, Reformative Conflicts: The Inversion of Hierarchies in Aphra Behn’s Oroonoko .......................................... 55
ALEXANDER SCHERR The Fragment at Work: Thomas Carlyle’s Novel Sartor Resartus (1834) as Implicit Theory of Form and Model for Cultural Change ...................................... 71
II. THE CULTURAL WORK OF FORMS IN MODERN AND CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE
WOLFGANG HALLET The Cultural and Social Power of Semiotic Forms in the Novel ................................ 87
ALENA HEINRITZ Forms of Work as Work of Form: The Poetics of Work and Labor in Texts by Tret’yakov, Platonov, and Shalamov ..................................................... 105
MAREIKE GLIER The Journals of Jim Elliot (1948–1955): Affordances and Constraints of the Modern Spiritual Diary .................................... 121
DANIELA HENKE ‘Unreadable’ Texts. An Analysis towards the Ethics of Form on the Basis of Holocaust Fictions by Thomas Lehr and Thomas Harlan ................ 133
MICHAELA BECK From Plural to Impersonal: We-Narration and Neoliberal Paradigms of Feeling in Contemporary U.S. Novels ....................... 151
KATRIN BECKER Intersections of Class and Narrative Discourse: Forms at Work in Zadie Smith’s NW ........................................................................ 167
ALEXANDRA EFFE Forms at Work in Testimony: A Cognitive New Formalist Approach ..................... 185
III. THE CULTURAL WORK OF FORMS IN CONTEMPORARY MEDIA JULIA VAEßEN Cultural Models, Character Reception, and the Relevance of Form ......................... 205
REGINA LEONIE SCHMIDT The Either-Or Decision – Illustrating Binary Forms at Work by Means of the Patient’s Dilemma in Grey’s Anatomy (2005–) ............................. 223
EWELINA PEPIAK Why Can’t We All Just Get Along? Métissage and Whiteness in French Multicultural Comedy ..................................... 239
MAX BERGMANN From Database Cinema to YouTube Aesthetics: Digital Network Structures and Filmic Form ........................................................... 257
SARAH J. LINK “The Camera Never Lies”: Form and Objectivity in Warren Ellis and Ben Templesmith’s Fell: Feral City ......................................... 273
JULIA CAROLINE BÖCKLING “Privacy Is Theft”: The Form of the List in Depicting Social Media Engagement in Dave Eggers’ The Circle ........................ 291
Notes on Contributors ............................................................................................... 305
Speculative India analyses the trans-generic mode of the speculative in Indian Anglophone literature and popular culture to dialogize established genre taxonomies with concepts of literary realism and postcolonial theory. The works analysed in this study transgress generic boundaries and combine various themes, aesthetics and techniques to centre previously marginalized worldviews, sometimes expressing perceptions that surpass the knowable and scientifically verifiable. To make sense of the liminality of works situated between the seemingly diametrically opposed extremes of realism and anti-realist fiction, this study introduces the concept of para-realism with its three formal strategies of estrangement, extrapolation and augmentation. Estrangement serves as a framework to discuss how recent speculative fiction engages with the gender dynamics of the vast Ramayana tradition. Extrapolation, in turn, is discernible in Manjula Padmanabhan’s play Harvest, Priya Sarukkai Chabria’s novel Generation 14 and Vandana Singh’s short story “Delhi” which envision the (posthuman) future by looking back on Indian history and hence repeatedly unsettle linear concepts of time. This ties in with the concept of augmentation as a form of enhancement, which is central to the negotiation of the chances and pitfalls of both nationalism and globalization in Rakesh Roshan’s film Koi... Mil Gaya, its two Krrish sequels as well as in two of Samit Basu’s superhero novels. In its use of para-realism, the speculative not only reveals its rootedness in extratextual epistemologies and ontologies but also turns into a worlding project that draws attention to the diverse experiences of being in the world.
CONTENTS
I. INTRODUCTION SPECULATIVE INDIA .................................................................. 1 Coming to Terms: Indian Anglophone Speculative Fiction .................................. 2 Creating Para-Realism: Estrangement, Extrapolation and Augmentation .......... 10
II. THE HISTORY AND POLITICS OF SPECULATIVE FICTION ................................ 17 Speculative Fiction as ‘Soft’ Science Fiction ..................................................... 18 Delineating a Postcolonial Counter-Discourse.................................................... 20 Speculative Fiction and the Fantastic .................................................................. 24 Debating (Im-)Possibility .................................................................................... 27 The Formation of Para-Realism .......................................................................... 28
III. FAMILIARIZATION AND ESTRANGEMENT IN CONTEMPORARY RAMAYANAS ... 34 Estranging the Familiar, Familiarizing the Strange ............................................. 34 The Ramayana Tradition: Contexts and Contestations ....................................... 37 Sita in Speculative Fiction .................................................................................. 46
3.1 Vedic Ideals in Future Contexts: The Ramayan 3392 A.D. Comics ................... 48 Familiar Characters in an Estranged World ........................................................ 49 Disciplining Seeta ............................................................................................... 54 ‘Being Sita’ in the Future .................................................................................... 59
3.2 Finding Sita in Samhita Arni’s The Missing Queen ............................................ 61 Speculative Fiction and Formal Estrangement .................................................... 62 The Unknowable Sita .......................................................................................... 65 From Itihasa to Historiographic Metafiction ...................................................... 70
3.3 From Ramayana to Sitayana: Swapna Kishore’s “Regressions” ........................ 73 Becoming Sita ..................................................................................................... 74 A Women’s Ramayana ....................................................................................... 80 Storytelling as Empowerment ............................................................................. 83
IV. EXTRAPOLATION AND THE SPECULATIVE: IMAGINING THE FUTURE INDIA ... 85 Theorizing Extrapolation .................................................................................... 85 The Roots of the Future ...................................................................................... 90 Extrapolation in Speculative Fiction ................................................................... 96
4.1 The Posthuman Future in Manjula Padmanabhan’s Harvest .............................. 97 Extrapolation and the Future’s Past .................................................................. 100 “That’s a special bond”: Organ Trafficking and (Dis-)Empowerment ............. 103 Becoming Posthuman ....................................................................................... 107 Reclaiming Agency ........................................................................................... 115 Extrapolation and Para-Realism ........................................................................ 119
4.2 Reframing the Roots of the Future in Priya Sarukkai Chabria’s Generation 14 .......................................................... 120 History from Below .......................................................................................... 123 Collapsing Time: The Future is the Past is the Future ...................................... 129 Seeking Empowerment in the Past .................................................................... 134 The Prospects of Tomorrow .............................................................................. 138
4.3 Spacetime: Multiple Temporalities in Vandana Singh’s “Delhi” ..................... 139 Looking Beyond the Present ............................................................................. 141 The Past is Still Happening ............................................................................... 145 “A History of the Future” .................................................................................. 149 Extrapolating Delhi ........................................................................................... 153
V. SPECULATIVE FICTION, AUGMENTATION AND THE NATION ......................... 155 Augmentation and Para-Realism ....................................................................... 155 Superpowered World Scenarios ........................................................................ 157 Truth and Justic beyond the American Way: Superheroes in Indian Popular Culture ............................................................. 161 Augmented Bodies and the Nation ................................................................... 163
5.1 Of Aliens and Gods: Nationalism, Vedic Science and Religious Para-Realism in Rakesh Roshan’s Superhero Universe .................... 168 Vedic Science in Koi… Mil Gaya ..................................................................... 171 Koi… Mil Gaya and Religious Nationalism ..................................................... 175 Healing the Hero ............................................................................................... 179 Provisional Diasporas and the Return ‘Home’ Narrative .................................. 183 Healing the Nation ............................................................................................ 188 Imagining the Krrish Nation ............................................................................. 192
5.2 Contested World Orders and Global Heroes in Samit Basu’s Turbulence and Resistance ..................................................... 193 Postnational Ideoscapes and the Turn Towards the Global ............................... 195 Global Flows of Superpowers and (Post-)Empire Geographies ........................ 202 The Superpowered Elite: Negotiating the Boundaries of the Human ............... 210
VI. EYES OF TIME: ENVISIONING THE PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE OF INDIAN ANGLOPHONE SPECULATIVE FICTION ................... 220 Estranging the Ramayana: Sita Refusing to be Sita .......................................... 223 Extrapolating a Future with a Past .................................................................... 226 Augmented (Super-)Humans and the Nation .................................................... 229 From Indian Anglophone Speculative Fiction towards World/ing Speculative Fiction? ........................................................... 233
WORKS CITED .......................................................................................................... 237