Intersecting Worlds
Colonial Liminality in US Southern and Icelandic Literatures
Intersecting Worlds:Colonial Liminality in US Southern and Icelandic Literatures recalibrates readings of US southern and American writers by exploring comparable depictions of race, colonialism, Whiteness, gender, and sexuality in Icelandic literature. This book explores the liminality, ambiguity, and general unease that result when postcolonial theories are applied to both Iceland and the US South. It investigates the parallels and also the limitations to such comparisons with the labels and binaries created to represent colonial dynamics flattening the complex positionings of Iceland and the US South.
Iceland, an independent nation since 1944, has a complex colonial history. As a former dependency of Denmark that endured a US military presence from 1941 to 2006, Iceland’s global positioning invites comparisons to formerly colonized spaces. At the same time, Iceland’s history and geopolitical location differ from other colonized nations, which were subject to brutal violence and dehumanizing practices. This comparative project investigates Iceland’s colonial liminality and draws connections to the colonial ambiguity of the US South, depicted as colonized by the federal government during Reconstruction and the site of the colonization of the Black population through slavery and its later iterations.
Exploring the work of US southern writers, like William Faulkner, Gayl Jones, Jean Toomer, and Carson McCullers, alongside twentieth-century Icelandic novelists, including Halldór Laxness, Svava Jakobsdóttir, Guðbergur Bergsson, and Fríða Áslaug Sigurðardóttir, on both thematic and aesthetic levels reveals much about each region’s history and the complexity of colonial dynamics. Intersecting Worlds centers layers of Whiteness in both national and transnational contexts, challenges ideas of Nordic and US southern exceptionalism, and exposes the complex impacts of colonialism in the Global North and the Global South, as depicted in twentieth-century literature.
Jenna Grace Sciuto is professor of English at the Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts. Her work examines the intersections of race, gender, and sexuality in US and global literatures. She is author of Policing Intimacy: Law, Sexuality, and the Color Line in Twentieth-Century Hemispheric American Literature, published by University Press of Mississippi.
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Liminal Colonial Worlds
Chapter 1: Delimiting Difference: Language, Stereotypes, and Repetition in Halldór Laxness, William Faulkner, and Svava Jakobsdóttir
Chapter 2: Aesthetic Radicals: White Violence as Exclusion in Guðbergur Bergsson, William Faulkner, and Jean Toomer
Chapter 3: “I’m Sick of Being a Girl!”: Nonconformity and Intersecting Hierarchies of Identity in Halldór Laxness and Carson McCullers
Chapter 4: “A Woman’s Wildness”: Power, Magic, and Intergenerational Ties in Tiphanie Yanique and Fríða Áslaug Sigurðardóttir
Coda: Processing the Present, Looking to a Decolonial Future
Notes
Works Cited
Index