“How Did I End Up Here?”: Dynamic Cartography in Dinaw Mengestu’s <i>The Beautiful Things that Heaven Bears</i>

Authors

  • Nicole Cesare Rowan University

Keywords:

Dinaw Mengestu, contemporary novel, cartography, globalization, Washington D.C.

Abstract

This article considers the principle of relation in Dinaw Mengestu’s The Beautiful Things that Heaven Bears in order to suggest that the novel brings narrative and mapping practices closer together. I develop this relational reading by connecting Edouard Glissant’s work on the poetics of relation to David Harvey’s conception of relational spacetime, arguing that the novel’s fragmented and elliptical narrative embodies these principles. As a result, it generates what I call dynamic cartography, a mode of space-writing characterized by fluidity, mobility, and disjunction. Reading this text through the framework of relation shows how Beautiful Things deploys maps and other cartographic ephemera to negotiate and mediate geographical upheavals such as diaspora and gentrification; more broadly, it reveals how the literature of globalization functions as a form of cartography, a representation of space that conditions our understanding of the world. Ultimately, this reading suggests that as space becomes increasingly dynamic and disjunctive, so too do the forms that represent that space.

Author Biography

Nicole Cesare, Rowan University

Nicole Cesare received her Ph.D. from Temple University in Spring 2014, and teaches in the Writing Arts Department at Rowan University. She recently published “Strange[r] Encounters: I Do Not Come to You by Chance and the Rhetoric of 419” in the Journal of Commonwealth and Postcolonial Studies. Her research interests include the contemporary African novel, critical cartography, and globalization studies. She is currently working on a project that looks at the intersections of geography and genre in 20th and 21st century African novels.

Downloads

Published

2015-04-14

Issue

Section

Articles