This book examines how contemporary global novels by Salman Rushdie,
David Mitchell, Rana Dasgupta and Rachel Kushner have evolved new
aesthetics to represent global economic and ecological crises. Paying
close attention to the interrelations between postcolonial, world, and
global literatures, this book argues that postcolonial literary studies
cannot account for global crises that exceed the national and
anti-colonial. Advocating an interdisciplinary framework informed by a
synthesis of materialist literary theory with world-systems theory,
combining Fredric Jameson and Georg Lukács with Giovanni Arrighi and
Jason W. Moore, this book examines how global literatures metabolise not
only socioeconomic conditions, but also transformations in the
world-ecology, and emergent developmental and epochal crises of
capitalism.