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Un)timely Crises explores how 'crisis'-as a narrative, concept,
grammar, and experience-structures time and space. This
collectively written volume extends Bakhtin's 'chronotope' to
challenge mobilizations of crisis within neoliberal
governmentality. The book explores how contemporary crises can
trigger memories and traumas of earlier events as well as foster
practices of resistance and alternative visions of the future.
Drawing from across disciplines and geographical contexts,
(Un)timely Crises reimagines the relation of 'crisis' with
'critique', proposing future trajectories for thinking and living
in and through crisis.
This book uses narrative responses to the 2010 Haiti earthquake as
a starting point for an analysis of notions of disaster,
vulnerability, reconstruction and recovery. The turn to a wide
range of literary works enables a composite comparative analysis,
which encompasses the social, political and individual dimensions
of the earthquake. This book focuses on a vision of an open-ended
future, otherwise than as a threat or fear. Mika turns to concepts
of hinged chronologies, slow healing and remnant dwelling. Weaving
theory with attentive close-readings, the book offers an open-ended
framework for conceptualising post-disaster recovery and healing.
These processes happen at different times and must entail the
elimination of compound vulnerabilities that created the disaster
in the first place. Challenging characterisations of the region as
a continuous catastrophe this book works towards a bold vision of
Haiti's and the Caribbean's futures. The study shows how narratives
can extend some of the key concepts within discipline-bound
approaches to disasters, while making an important contribution to
the interface between disaster studies, postcolonial ecocriticism
and Haitian Studies.
This book uses narrative responses to the 2010 Haiti earthquake as
a starting point for an analysis of notions of disaster,
vulnerability, reconstruction and recovery. The turn to a wide
range of literary works enables a composite comparative analysis,
which encompasses the social, political and individual dimensions
of the earthquake. This book focuses on a vision of an open-ended
future, otherwise than as a threat or fear. Mika turns to concepts
of hinged chronologies, slow healing and remnant dwelling. Weaving
theory with attentive close-readings, the book offers an open-ended
framework for conceptualising post-disaster recovery and healing.
These processes happen at different times and must entail the
elimination of compound vulnerabilities that created the disaster
in the first place. Challenging characterisations of the region as
a continuous catastrophe this book works towards a bold vision of
Haiti's and the Caribbean's futures. The study shows how narratives
can extend some of the key concepts within discipline-bound
approaches to disasters, while making an important contribution to
the interface between disaster studies, postcolonial ecocriticism
and Haitian Studies.
Un)timely Crises explores how 'crisis'-as a narrative, concept,
grammar, and experience-structures time and space. This
collectively written volume extends Bakhtin's 'chronotope' to
challenge mobilizations of crisis within neoliberal
governmentality. The book explores how contemporary crises can
trigger memories and traumas of earlier events as well as foster
practices of resistance and alternative visions of the future.
Drawing from across disciplines and geographical contexts,
(Un)timely Crises reimagines the relation of 'crisis' with
'critique', proposing future trajectories for thinking and living
in and through crisis.
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