Christopher GoGwilt is Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Fordham University. He is the author of The Passage of Literature: Genealogies of Modernism in Conrad, Rhys, and Pramoedya (Oxford, 2011, winner, Modernist Studies Association Book Prize), The Fiction of Geopolitics: Afterimages of Culture from Wilkie Collins to Alfred Hitchcock (Stanford, 2000), and The Invention of the West: Joseph Conrad and the Double-Mapping of Europe and Empire (Stanford, 1995).
In an exhilarating exploration of the letter K and other micro-textual details across a range of writing systems, GoGwilt reexamines the history of romanization and its entanglement with Arabic, Chinese, and other major scripts. A fascinating range of modernist texts converge to form a powerful archive of exile, encounter, conflict, and transformative shifts in modern global history. A bold experiment in comparative method. ---Lydia H. Liu, author of The Freudian Robot: Digital Media and the Future of the Unconscious No one has ever drawn, from the history of romanization and the shifting norms of transliteration, such subtle insights into the linguistic, social, and aesthetic forms of modernity as Christopher GoGwilt, and across so vast a world of scripts and languages. He has given us a truly innovative, eye-opening book. ---Sheldon Pollock, Columbia University