
Professor Madhu Krishnan
MA (Stanford), MA (Nott.), PhD (Nott.)
Current positions
Professor of African, World and Comparative Literatures
Department of English
Contact
Press and media
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Research interests
I was appointed to the University in 2013 as Lecturer in Postcolonial Writing (20th/21st Century). In 2017 I was promoted to Senior Lecturer in Postcolonial Writing and, as of 1 August 2019, am Professor of African, World and Comparative Literatures.
My research considers contemporary African writing in the context of transnational, world and global literary production. I am particularly interested in the ways in which literary writing contributes to, subverts and is shaped by a broader, a priori image of 'Africa' circulating in a global imaginary, as well as the varied and contested registrations of this process across differing scales of expression and geography. To date, I have published three monographs: Contemporary African Literature in English: Global Locations, Postcolonial Identifications (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014), Writing Spatiality in West Africa: Colonial Legacies in the Anglophone/Francophone Novel (Boydell and Brewer, 2018 - part of the African Articulations series) and Contingent Canons: African Literature and the Politics of Location (Cambridge University Press, 2018 - part of the Elements series).
I am at present PI on a five-year project titled 'Literary Activism in sub-Saharan Africa: Commons, Publics and Networks of Practice', funded by a European Research Commission Starting Grant, part of the 'excellent science' pillar of Horizon 2020, the EU's research and innovation programme. This stems from a number of years of project-based work with literary collectives on the African continent, based in countries including Cameroon, Côte d'Ivoire, Uganda and Kenya. I have also recently completed or am near completing collaborative projects on literary translation, the creative writing workshop as decolonial praxis, digital narrative production and South-South literary networks.
From 2014 to 2016, I served as the Director for the now-defunct Centre for the Study of Colonial and Postcolonial Societies at the University of Bristol, and I am currently Director of the Centre for Black Humanities. Since 2020, I have served as co-lead for the Research and Civic Engagement workstream of the University's Anti-Racism Steering Group. I am also on the board of the Bristol Poetry Institute, Bristol Ideas, Bibliothèque 1949 (Abidjan), a trustee for Literature Works and a member of the Engagement Board for the Temple Quarter project. From 2017-20, I was theme lead for Global Citizenship for the Bristol Futures initiative. I am particularly intereted in the possibilities and pitfalls of decolonial knowledge production with respect to pedagogy and UK HE more broadly.
Teaching
I would welcome applications from students working on any area of African literary studies or world literatures. I especially welcome applications which consider the intersection of literary criticism and material cultures, as well as those which explore the relationship between late capitalism, literary production and form. I am happy to consider projects which seek to re-conceptualise world literary topographies and those which seek to expand upon the orthodoxies of postcolonial criticism.
Projects and supervisions
Research projects
Za! Magazine
Role
Co-Investigator
Managing organisational unit
Department of EnglishDates
01/06/2023 to 31/05/2024
Literary Translation Workshops: Evaluating Social Impact and Global Possibilities
Principal Investigator
Role
Co-Investigator
Description
This project plans to deliver a portfolio of activities connected to our ongoing research on the social role of literary translation training in sub-Saharan Africa. It will enable our work…Managing organisational unit
Department of FrenchDates
01/07/2020 to 30/04/2022
Narratives and the Grapevine: New Modes for Literature and Storytelling
Role
Co-Investigator
Managing organisational unit
Department of Hispanic, Portuguese and Latin American StudiesDates
06/01/2020 to 31/07/2020
Literary Activism in sub-Saharan Africa: Commons, Publics and Networks of Practice
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
Department of EnglishDates
01/01/2020 to 31/12/2024
Literary Activism in sub-Saharan Africa: Commons, Publics and Networks of Practice
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
Department of EnglishDates
01/01/2020 to 31/12/2024
Thesis supervisions
(Re)shaping Genre
Supervisors
That ‘African Prince’ who keeps sending you e-mails
Supervisors
Publications
Recent publications
01/04/2021Structures of Feeling, Late Capitalism and the Making of African Literature in the Global Literary Marketplace
Raymond Williams at 100
Introduction: Literary Activism in 21st Century Africa
Eastern African Literary and Cultural Studies
Small Magazines in Africa
Social Dynamics
What Was African Fiction?
The Black Scholar
Critical Approaches to Nigerian Literature
Reading Nigeria