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Dockside Reading Isabel Hofmeyr

Dockside Reading By Isabel Hofmeyr

Dockside Reading by Isabel Hofmeyr


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Summary

Isabel Hofmeyr traces the relationship between print culture, colonialism, and the ocean through the institution of the late-nineteenth- and early twentieth-century British colonial custom houses, which acted as censors and pronounced on copyright and checked imported printed matter for piracy, sedition, or obscenity.

Dockside Reading Summary

Dockside Reading: Hydrocolonialism and the Custom House by Isabel Hofmeyr

In Dockside Reading Isabel Hofmeyr traces the relationships among print culture, colonialism, and the ocean through the institution of the British colonial Custom House. During the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, dockside customs officials would leaf through publications looking for obscenity, politically objectionable materials, or reprints of British copyrighted works, often dumping these condemned goods into the water. These practices, echoing other colonial imaginaries of the ocean as a space for erasing incriminating evidence of the violence of empire, informed later censorship regimes under apartheid in South Africa. By tracking printed matter from ship to shore, Hofmeyr shows how literary institutions like copyright and censorship were shaped by colonial control of coastal waters. Set in the environmental context of the colonial port city, Dockside Reading explores how imperialism colonizes water. Hofmeyr examines this theme through the concept of hydrocolonialism, which puts together land and sea, empire and environment.

Dockside Reading Reviews

As we have come to expect from Isabel Hofmeyr, Dockside Reading is dazzlingly creative, intellectually playful, and immaculately crafted. This is a brilliant history of the ideas and textual forms that emerged from the damp crates that customs officials scoured at the water's edge for signs of contamination. Setting sail from South Africa, ranging across the world's oceans, this is a quietly revolutionary, fully aquatic literary history for our times. -- Sunil Amrith, Dhawan Professor of History, Yale University
What happens to books when they cross borders? Isabel Hofmeyr sets her radically new history of literature not in the library but at the dock. In pages where authors and scholars are upstaged by censors, customs officers, and even dockhands, she challenges literary critics to think beyond the text as a static entity tied to a single nation or a single landmass. This is that rare book that will make it impossible to continue doing business as usual-for literary critics, for legal scholars, and for book historians. -- Leah Price, author of * What We Talk about When We Talk About Books: The History and Future of Reading *
Hofmeyr addresses themes that acknowledge but transcend the particularities of place, revealing instead the connecting threads that bind disparate parts of the world together. -- Dane Kennedy * International Journal of African Historical Studies *

About Isabel Hofmeyr

Isabel Hofmeyr is Professor Emeritus at the University of the Witwatersrand and Global Distinguished Professor at New York University. She is coeditor of Ten Books That Shaped the British Empire: Creating an Imperial Commons, also published by Duke University Press, and author of Gandhi's Printing Press: Experiments in Slow Reading.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix
Introduction. Hydrocolonialism: The View from the Dockside 1
1. The Custom House and Hydrocolonial Governance 27
2. Customs and Objects on a Hydrocolonial Frontier 39
3. Copyright on a Hydrocolonial Frontier 49
4. Censorship on a Hydrocolonial Frontier 63
Conclusion. Dockside Genres and Postcolonial Literature 77
Notes 85
Bibliography 103
Index 117

Additional information

NGR9781478017745
9781478017745
1478017740
Dockside Reading: Hydrocolonialism and the Custom House by Isabel Hofmeyr
New
Paperback
Duke University Press
2022-02-11
136
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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