Bibliographic Information

Colonial discourse, postcolonial theory

edited by Francis Barker, Peter Hulme and Margaret Iversen

(The Essex symposia : literature, politics, theory)

Manchester University Press , Distributed exclusively in the USA and Canada by St. Martin's Press, c1994

Available at  / 12 libraries

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Note

Includes references (p. [267]-282) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The issues of colonialism and imperialism have recently come to the forefront of thinking in the humanities. Disciplines such as history, literature and anthropology are taking stock of their extensive and usually unacknowledged legacy of Empire. At the same time, contemporary cultural theory has had to respond to post-colonial pressure, with its different registers and agendas. This volume ranges, geographically, from Brazil to India and South Africa, from the Andes to the Caribbean and the USA. This range is matched by a breadth of historical perspectives. Central to the whole volume is a critique of the very idea of the "postcolonial" itself. Contributors include Annie Coombes, Simon During, Peter Hulme, Neil Lazarus, David Lloyd, Anne McClintock, Zita Nunes, Benita Parry, Graham Pechey, Mary Louise Pratt, Renato Rosaldo and Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak.

Table of Contents

  • Transculturation and autoethnography - Peru 1615/1980, Mary Louise Pratt
  • Rousseau's patrimony - primitivism, romance and becoming other, Simon During
  • the locked heart - the Creole family romance of "Wide Sargasso Sea", Peter Hulme
  • the recalcitrant object - culture contact and the question of hybridity, Annie Coombes
  • anthropology and race in Brazilian modernism, Zita Nunes
  • how to read a "culturally different" book, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak
  • post-apartheid narratives, Graham Pechey
  • resistance theory/theorizing resistance, or two cheers for nativism, Benita Parry
  • national consciousness and the specificity of (post)colonial intellectualism, Neil Lazarus
  • ethnic cultures, minority discourse and the state, David Lloyd
  • social justice and the crisis of national communities, Renato Rosaldo
  • the angel of history - pitfalls of the term "postcolonialism", Anne McClintock.

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