All Stories

  1. Introduction: Reading Ireland's Food, Energy, and Climate
  2. Water shocks: Neoliberal hydrofiction and the crisis of “cheap water”
  3. World Literature, Neoliberalism, and the Culture of Discontent
  4. World-Culture and the Neoliberal World-System: An Introduction
  5. Trains, Stone, and Energetics: African Resource Culture and the Neoliberal World-Ecology
  6. Marxism, Postcolonial Theory and the Future of Critique
  7. “Not even a sci-fi writer”
  8. “It could be otherwise, it should be otherwise”
  9. ‘Always Returning from It’: Neoliberal Capitalism, Retrospect, and Marlon James's A Brief History of Seven Killings
  10. Cacao and cascadura: Energetic consumption and production in world-ecological literature
  11. Capitalism’s Long Spiral: Periodicity, Temporality and the Global Contemporary in World Literature
  12. The Political Ecology of Storms in Caribbean Literature
  13. Introduction: Ireland in the World-System
  14. World-Ecology and Ireland: The Neoliberal Ecological Regime
  15. Ireland in the World-System: An Interview with Denis O'Hearn
  16. Towards a Radical World Literature: Experimental Writing in a Globalizing World
  17. “Surviving Globalization”: Experiment and World-Historical Imagination in Rana Dasgupta’s Solo
  18. ‘Uncanny states’
  19. World-Literature in the Context of Combined and Uneven Development
  20. The Question of Peripheral Realism
  21. Oboroten Spectres
  22. The European Literary Periphery
  23. Ivan Vladislavic
  24. ‘Irrealism’ in Tayeb Salih’s Season of Migration to the North
  25. ‘Could it be everywhere?’
  26. “Nothing is truly hidden”: visibility, aesthetics and Yasmina Khadra’s detective fiction
  27. Postcolonial studies and world literature
  28. Book Reviews
  29. Editorial
  30. Peripheral Realism, Millennial Capitalism, and Roberto Bolano's 2666
  31. Paradise Discourse, Imperialism, and Globalization
  32. Reviews
  33. Reconstructing Hybridity: Post-Colonial Studies in Transition
  34. Against the Grain
  35. Chapter 13: ‘Uncanny states’: global ecoGothic and the world-ecology in Rana Dasgupta’s Tokyo Cancelled
  36. Roberto Bolaño and the Remapping of World Literature