History: Text: Future

Authors

Abstract

This article is an investigation into the historiographical concerns that inform any literary projection of the historical past and/or present into the future. Parts 1-3, then, survey the status of the future in the textualisation of history, engaging with narrative versus nomological accounts of historiographical structures and moving towards the utopian element informing historical projection. Part 4 picks up the more specifically "literary" concerns to which a consideration of the utopian brings us, and prepares a critical strategy for dealing with the intersection of the historical and the literary in their use of the future. The project as it stands is meant to serve as a preparation for a later analysis of key South African literary works which operate within the "genre" (developed as a heuristic device) of "future histories".

 

Opsomming
Hierdie artikel ondersoek historiografiese aangeleenthede wat enige literere projeksie van die historiese verlede en/of hede tot die toekoms belig. Deel 1-3 ondersoek die status van die toekoms in die tekstualisering van die geskiedenis - dit betrek verhalende versus nomologiese beskrywinge van historiografiese strukture en beweeg dan na die utopiese element wat historiese projeksie belig. Deel 4 ontwikkel die meer spesifieke "literere" aangeleenthede waarna 'n oorweging van die utopiese ons lei, en berei 'n kritiese strategie voor om die raakpunte tussen die historiese en literere gebruik van die toekoms te hanteer. Die huidige projek is bedoel om te dien as 'n voorbereiding vir 'n latere analise van sleutelwerke in die Suid-Afrikaanse literatuur, wat binne die "genre" (ontwikkel as 'n heuristiese middel) van "toekomstige geskiedenisse" opereer.

Author Biography

Michael Green, University of KwaZulu-Natal

Michael Green is lecturer in English at the University of Natal, Durban. He has published in the fields of American and Southern African Literature; articles and reviews have appeared in English in Africa, World Literature Written in English, Comparative Writing, Upstream, Current Writing, The English Academy Review, Crux, and Journal of Literary Studies. He has also edited the Maskew Miller edition of A Tale of Two Cities. His current research interests centre on issues of history in Southern African literature.

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Published

1990-09-01

How to Cite

Green, Michael. 1990. “History: Text: Future”. Journal of Literary Studies 6 (3):20 pages. https://unisapressjournals.co.za/index.php/jls/article/view/19117.

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Articles