Where the New World Is assesses how fiction published
since 1980 has resituated the U.S. South globally and how earlier
twentieth-century writing already had done so in ways traditional
southern literary studies tended to ignore. Martyn Bone argues that
this body of fiction has, over the course of some eighty years,
challenged received readings and understandings of the U.S. South
as a fixed place largely untouched by immigration (or even internal
migration) and economic globalization.
The writers discussed by Bone emphasize how migration and labor
have reconfigured the region’s relation to the nation and a range
of transnational scales: hemispheric (Jamaica, the Bahamas, Haiti),
transatlantic/Black Atlantic (Denmark, England, Mauritania), and
transpacific/global southern (Australia, China, Vietnam). Writers
under consideration include Zora Neale Hurston, Nella Larsen, John
Oliver Killens, Russell Banks, Erna Brodber, Cynthia Shearer, Ha
Jin, Monique Truong, Lan Cao, Toni Morrison, Peter Matthiessen,
Dave Eggers, and Laila Lalami.
The book also seeks to resituate southern studies by drawing on
theories of “scale” that originated in human geography. In this
way, Bone also offers a new paradigm in which the U.S. South is
thoroughly engaged with a range of other scales from the local to
the global, making both literature about the region and southern
studies itself truly transnational in scope.