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논문 기본 정보

자료유형
학술저널
저자정보
Marlo Starr (Johns Hopkins University)
저널정보
한국외국어대학교 아프리카연구소 Asian Journal of African Studies Asian Journal of African Studies Vol.48
발행연도
2020.6
수록면
55 - 81 (27page)

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초록· 키워드

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Though the novel dominates in theories of the world literary market, literary or little magazines archive postcolonial coalition building beyond “the West.” In a number of ways, the emergence of Kovave (1969-75), the first literary magazine of its kind in Papua New Guinea, helped spawn a regional literary movement across the Pacific Islands. In terms of look, feel, and mission, Kovave was a Pacific reimagining of the significant Nigerian magazine Black Orpheus (1957-75). The links between Kovave and Black Orpheus show the connective force of black internationalism and anticolonial solidarity, materially linking the Pacific to literary networks in Africa and the wider black Atlantic. While multiple factors in terms of language, foreign meddling, and “overzealous” editorial leadership undermined the anticolonial vision of these ephemeral periodicals, the development of the little magazine movement in the Pacific also demonstrates Indigenous modes of adaptability and connectivity, which would culminate in the articulation of a regional Oceanic identity. Beyond the book, little magazines and other small media offer important sites of analysis for understanding alternative networks of alliance and influence.

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Abstract
Beyond a Center-Periphery Model of Print Cultural History
From Black Orpheus to Kovave
Expansion of Pacific Print Culture
Conclusion: Little Magazines and Moving Islands
References

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UCI(KEPA) : I410-ECN-0101-2020-309-000665612