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Ethiopian Intellectual History and the Global: Käbbädä Mikael’s Geographies of Belonging

Marzagora, Sara

Ethiopian Intellectual History and the Global: Käbbädä Mikael’s Geographies of Belonging Thumbnail


Authors

Sara Marzagora



Abstract

Through the literary and historiographical works written by Ethiopian intellectual Käbbädä Mikael in the 1940s and 1950s, this article problematizes the concept of the “world” in world literature. In some theories of world literature, the world is presented as a static a priori, a self-evident spatial referent, a background setting for literary activities. Contrary to this objectivist frame, I propose instead to look at the world as a performative category, and to conceive world literature as a study of worldmaking processes. Käbbädä Mikael’s worldmaking attempted to break into the Eurocentric exclusivity of hegemonic narratives of modernity, jostling for recognition within modernization theory but also, at the same time, activating polycentric connections along oblique South-South networks. For him, the world was not a cosmopolitan project, but a pool of symbolic resources from which to draw in building a better future for Ethiopia.

Citation

Marzagora, S. (2019). Ethiopian Intellectual History and the Global: Käbbädä Mikael’s Geographies of Belonging. Journal of World Literature, 4(1), 107-128. https://doi.org/10.1163/24056480-00401006

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Mar 27, 2018
Online Publication Date Mar 6, 2019
Publication Date Mar 1, 2019
Deposit Date Jun 28, 2018
Publicly Available Date Jul 4, 2018
Journal Journal of World Literature
Print ISSN 2405-6472
Electronic ISSN 2405-6480
Publisher Brill Academic Publishers
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 4
Issue 1
Pages 107-128
DOI https://doi.org/10.1163/24056480-00401006
Keywords Ethiopia; Amharic literature; worldmaking; geographies of belonging; significant geographies

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