Short Story as World Literature: The Deep History and Modern Lives of an Impure Genre
By (Author) Prof Delia Ungureanu
Edited by Dr. Amndio Reis
Series edited by Professor Thomas Oliver Beebee
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
5th February 2026
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Literary theory
Short stories
Hardback
240
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
Global in scope, this volume uncovers the deep history of the short story as an "impure" genre by challenging the commonplace understanding in contemporary literary studies that the short story is primarily a product of Western modernity.
Genres do not have rigid, timeless, once-and-for-all definitions, and the short story is no exception. Short Story as World Literature invites the reader to reflect on the historical becoming of this impure genre, analyzing various forms of the short story throughout its deep history. It also challenges established ideas about the genre that limit its history to the prose form practiced by Edgar Allan Poe and canonized in Western Europe following Charles Baudelaires influential translation.
The story of the short story presented here goes into a much deeper history throughout time and space: its earliest forms include dreams and visions in ancient religious texts, parables, poems, maxims, but also more recently poem-objects and films. The authors examine how the short story evolves, sometimes almost beyond recognition, across different forms of art, genres, and media, as well as through translation and circulation with effects on institutions, educational politics, and the construction of a moral system of values.
An international team of established and emerging scholars in the fields of comparative and world literature including David Damrosch, Paulo Horta, Dominique Jullien, and Mads Rosendahl Thomsen, as well as Maria Dabija, Sophus Helle, and Michael Makarovsky untangle this complex and complicated (hi)story.
Delia Ungureanu is Executive Director of the Institute for World Literature at Harvard University, USA, and Associate Professor of Literary Theory and Comparative Literature at the University of Bucharest, Romania. Her publications include From Paris to Tln: Surrealism as World Literature (Bloomsbury, 2017) and Time Regained: World Literature and Cinema (Bloomsbury, 2021).
Amndio Reis is Postdoctoral Fellow at University of Lisbon, Portugal, and the editor-in-chief of Compendium: Journal of Comparative Studies. He is the author of Short Stories, Knowledge and the Supernatural: Machado de Assis, Henry James, Guy de Maupassant (2022).