|
Advanced search
Previous page
|
Title
Mobility and Public Transport in Post-independence Mozambican Fiction (1992-2022) |
Full text
http://hdl.handle.net/10400.5/95511 |
Date
2024 |
Author(s)
Falconi, Jessica |
Abstract
This article analyzes representations of mobility and public transport in the following Mozambican novels: Terra Sonâmbula [Sleepwalking Land] (1992), O Outro Pé da Sereia [The Mermaid's Other Foot] (2006) by Mia Couto, O Comboio de Sal e Açúcar [The Train of Salt and Sugar] (1999) by Licínio Azevedo, and Museu da Revolução [Museum of the Revolution] (2022) by João Paulo Borges Coelho. Despite the importance of mobility and public transport in these works, existing scholarship has not considered these themes but has opted for more traditional categories such as 'travel', 'diaspora', and 'migration'. Focusing on the literary portrayals of public transport and infrastructure of mobility ' i.e. buses, ships, and railway stations (Couto), a slow-moving train (Azevedo), and a Toyota Hiace car (Borges Coelho) ' this article aims to demonstrate the central role that the mobility/immobility binomial plays in the representation of post-independent Mozambique. The main argument of this article is that the images of the railway, the road, automobility, and maritime travel are the literal driving force of the narratives and contribute to the (un)building of the national space. I use literary perspectives on mobility studies and world-system approaches developed within the framework of world-literature (Warwick Research Collective) to demonstrate that the tropes of mobility and the representations of public transport in the four novels register and encode the social, political, and economic transitions in Mozambique's colonial and post-colonial history and its incorporation into the capitalist world-system. - info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion |
Subject(s)
João Paulo Borges Coelho; Licínio Azevedo; Mia Couto; mobility; post-independence Mozambican fiction; public transport |
Language
eng |
Publisher
Taylor and Francis |
Type of publication
article |
Rights
restrictedAccess |
Identifier
Falconi, Jessica (2024). Mobility and public transport in post-independence mozambican fiction (1992-2022). English Studies in Africa, 67:2, 61-76, DOI: 10.1080/00138398.2024.2384758; 10.1080/00138398.2024.2384758 |
Repository
Lissabon - University of Lissabon
|
Added to C-A: 2024-12-04;10:22:47 |
© Connecting-Africa 2004-2025 | Last update: Thursday, January 2, 2025 |
Webmaster
|