The Worlding of the South African Novel develops from something of a
paradox: that despite momentous political transition from apartheid to
democracy, little in South Africa's socio-economic reality has
actually changed. Poyner discusses how the contemporary South African
novel engages with this reality. In forms of literary experiment, the
novels open up intellectual spaces shaping or contesting the idea of the
"new South Africa". The mediatising of truth at the TRC hearings, how
best to deal with a spectacular yet covert past, the shaping for
"unimagined communities" of an inclusive public sphere, HIV/AIDS as the
preeminent site testing capitalist modernity, white anxieties about land
reform, disease as environmental injustice and the fostering of an
enabling restorative cultural memory: Poyner argues that through these
key nodes of intellectual thought, the novels speak to recent debates on
world-literature to register the "shock" of an uneven modernity produced
by a capitalist world economy.