Title: Multicultural Fiction
1Multicultural Fiction
- We live in an age of refugees, of migrants,
vagrants, nomads, roaming about the continent and
warming their souls with the memory of their
spiritual or ethnic, divine or geographical, real
or imaginary homes. - Leszek Kolakowski
2What do we mean when we say Multicultural Fiction?
- Is it World Literature?
- World literature is the literature of different
nations and cultures from antiquity to the
present. World literature is composed in the
writers native tongue and includes stories,
poetry, drama, fiction, and novels. - The term world literature is broader than
multicultural fiction but part of world
literature is included in multicultural fiction. -
3What do we mean when we say Multicultural Fiction?
- Is multicultural fiction books written in other
languages and translated into English? - Few literatures have truly prospered in
isolation from the world. English-speaking
culture in general and American culture in
particular has long benefited from
cross-pollination with other worlds and
languages. Thus it is an especially dangerous
imbalance when, today, 50 of all the books in
translation now published worldwide are
translated from English, but only 6 are
translated into English. Mission statement
wordswithoutborders.org - Multicultural fiction includes books written in
other languages and translated into English but
it also includes books originally written in
English.
4What do we mean when we say Multicultural Fiction?
- How much of a work must deal with a different
culture for us to call it multicultural? - How far back in time can a work be placed and
still be considered multicultural? - Can a multicultural book be written by a person
who is not a member of the culture described? - Are there requirements for authenticity?
5The best books break down borders.
- They surprise us whether they are set close to
home or abroad. They change our view of
ourselves they extend that phrase like me to
include what we thought was foreign and strange. - Hazel Rochman
6Reading archetypal stories across cultures
connects us to each other.
- People everywhere tell many of the same kinds of
stories about their quest to find their way. - Our artists and writers keep retelling the
age-old stories, transforming the heroic
adventure, revealing the myth in the mysteries of
contemporary experience.
7- The mythical events in our lives include rites
of passage the experience of birththe sudden
transition from childhood to adulthood, falling
in love, marriage, death our experience of the
deaths of others and our contemplation of - our own death.
- Wendy OFlaherty
8In contemporary stories, the epic journey may be
into the unknown realm of space or through time
it may be a pilgrimage to Mecca, or a discovery
about someone you thought you knew. It may be
on the road, far from home it may take you
through the maze of a suburban shopping center or
through the wilderness of the inner city. It may
take you through the dark forest of a distant
kingdom or through the tangle of feelings in the
human heart. You may make the journey alone, or
you may go with a friend or mentor. Or a
stranger may come to town and transform you.
Hazel Rochman
9- For the multicultural fiction genre study please
read two works - One set in another country and culture
- One set in the US that involves another culture
(immigrant experiences, other ethnicities or
religions)