Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Fanon and Sartre: colonial Manichaeism and the call to arms
- 3 Decolonization, community, nationalism: Gandhi, Nandy and the Subaltern Studies Collective
- 4 Foucault and Said: colonial discourse and Orientalism
- 5 Derrida and Bhabha: self, other and postcolonial ethics
- 6 Khatibi and Glissant: postcolonial ethics and the return to place
- 7 Ethics with politics? Spivak, Mudimbe, Mbembe
- 8 Conclusion: neocolonialism and the future of the discipline
- Questions for discussion and revision
- Guide to further reading
- Bibliography
- Index
1 - Introduction
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Fanon and Sartre: colonial Manichaeism and the call to arms
- 3 Decolonization, community, nationalism: Gandhi, Nandy and the Subaltern Studies Collective
- 4 Foucault and Said: colonial discourse and Orientalism
- 5 Derrida and Bhabha: self, other and postcolonial ethics
- 6 Khatibi and Glissant: postcolonial ethics and the return to place
- 7 Ethics with politics? Spivak, Mudimbe, Mbembe
- 8 Conclusion: neocolonialism and the future of the discipline
- Questions for discussion and revision
- Guide to further reading
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Postcolonialism is a broad and constantly changing movement that has aroused a good deal of both interest and controversy. Inaugurated in earnest during and after the fight for independence in the remaining British and French colonies around the 1950s and 1960s, it has developed rapidly to become today a major area of intellectual innovation and debate. While the term first became popular in North American university campuses, and in particular in literary departments, it is now widely used both inside and outside Western academic institutions and attracts ever-growing numbers of commentators as well as students. The term “postcolonialism” can generally be understood as the multiple political, economic, cultural and philosophical responses to colonialism from its inauguration to the present day, and is somewhat broad and sprawling in scope. While “anti-colonialism” names specific movements of resistance to colonialism, postcolonialism refers to the wider, multifaceted effects and implications of colonial rule. Postcolonialism frequently offers a challenge to colonialism, but does not constitute a single programme of resistance; indeed, it is considered consequently by some to be rather vague and panoptic in its ever more ambitious field of enquiry. This book will focus on the philosophical dimensions of postcolonialism, and will demonstrate the diversity of conceptual models and strategies used by postcolonial philosophers rather than by political thinkers or literary writers. Postcolonial philosophy will be shown to feed into these, but detailed discussion of the politics, economics and literature of postcolonialism is beyond the scope of this study.
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- Understanding Postcolonialism , pp. 1 - 24Publisher: Acumen PublishingPrint publication year: 2009