Afrasia at War

Q3 Arts and Humanities
Matatu Pub Date : 2021-11-22 DOI:10.1163/18757421-05201010
Frank Schulze–Engler
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Memories of global wars are often anything but global: counterfactual notions of a “white man’s war” continue to present a one-sided account of World War II centred on Europe and North America that sidelines the contributions and sacrifices of millions of soldiers from all over the world and negates their manifold agendas and forms of agency. This is particularly true of the “Afrasian” war experiences of tens of thousands of African soldiers who fought in Asia which are the subject of Biyi Bandele’s novel Burma Boy. The following essay highlights how Bandele’s text counteracts Eurocentric accounts of World War II, explores the complex motivations of African soldiers and their equally complex encounters with Asians in Burma, and draws on transregional imaginaries to produce a challenging non-heroic account of “Afrasia at war.”
战争中的非洲
全球战争的记忆往往不是全球性的:“白人战争”的反事实概念继续对以欧洲和北美为中心的第二次世界大战进行片面的描述,忽视了来自世界各地数百万士兵的贡献和牺牲,并否定了他们的多种议程和代理形式。这尤其体现在成千上万在亚洲作战的非洲士兵的“亚洲”战争经历上,这些经历正是比伊·班德尔的小说《缅甸男孩》的主题。下面这篇文章强调了班德尔的文本是如何抵消以欧洲为中心的第二次世界大战的叙述的,探讨了非洲士兵的复杂动机,以及他们在缅甸与亚洲人同样复杂的遭遇,并利用跨区域的想象,为“战争中的非洲”创造了一个具有挑战性的非英雄主义的叙述。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Matatu
Matatu Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
0.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
9
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