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B. Venkat Mani, Recoding World Literature: Libraries, Print Culture, and Germany's Pact with Books. New York: Fordham UP, 2017. 348 pp.

from Book Reviews

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 May 2018

Carl Niekerk
Affiliation:
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
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Summary

“World literature”—a concept once reviled because of its canonical implications— has made an unexpected comeback, in part because of an (equally unpredictable) alliance with postcolonial theory. Venkat Mani's latest book is one of a series of attempts to explore the usefulness of the concept in a postcolonial context. Within this debate Venkat Mani positions himself by arguing for a material history of “world literature,” less however by tracing the (material) distribution of individual texts—although there are a few examples of that as well—, but rather by focusing on the institutions and technologies available to distribute books (or their contents) to readers. The study covers topics as diverse as libraries’ attempts to globalize their holdings, infrastructures and networks for the supply of “world literature,” the origins of the Reclam Universal-Bibliothek (for which a change in German copyright law was largely responsible), the importance of literary magazines for familiarizing their readers with texts outside of their linguistic and cultural community, and Mani's book, in its final chapter, also looks at the World Wide Web as a “library without walls.” Recoding World Literature is a book about what Mani calls bibliomigrancy—the movement and travel of books across linguistic, cultural, and national borders.

“World literature” is not by necessity a cosmopolitan, emancipatory notion, as Mani makes clear. The way the concept has been used is deeply Eurocentric, in an unholy alliance with Western imperialism, and it has often served to essentialize cultures by reducing them to a few canonical texts. This story has been told before, but never in such historical detail and using these specific data. Although the concept has often been understood to advocate for a cosmopolitan attitude towards other cultures—Ernst Moritz Arndt cautioned that it would seduce readers away from national literatures and the nation more generally (108)—it was not at all incompatible with the idea of a “national literature,” and at times both notions co-existed without problems (128). Without a doubt the term was appropriated for questionable, not exactly cosmopolitan purposes. The Nazis instrumentalized the concept for their cause, as can be seen for instance in the magazine Weltliteratur, launched in October 1935 by the Wiking Verlag in Berlin and edited by Hellmuth Langenbucher.

Type
Chapter
Information
Goethe Yearbook 25
Publications of the Goethe Society of North America
, pp. 308 - 310
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2018

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