Online Encyclopedia
Post-colonialism
Post-colonialism refers to the intellectual field opened up by Edward Said's book Orientatlism. It refers to a set of theories in continental philosophy that grapple with the legacy of 19th century British and French colonial rule, especially with the dilemmas of developing a national identity in the wake of colonial rule. It is concerned with the ways knowledge of colonized people have served the interests of colonizers, and raises more general questions about how knowledge of subordinate people is produced, and how such knowledge is used. More controversial trends, like hybridity postcolonialism (Homi Bhabha) and liberal postcolonialism (Duncan Ivison), are probably reactions to the communitarian history of postcolonialism, which was and still is embedded in identity politics. The study of the post-colonial has gained popularity in recent years.
Founding works on post-colonialism
- Edward Said Orientalism
- Franz Fanon The Wretched of the Earth
- Albert Memmi The Colonizer and the Colonized
- Homi Bhabha The Location of Culture
- Duncan Ivison Postcolonial Liberalism
external links
- Ranajit Guha Subaltern Studies
- Alamgir Hashmi Commonwealth Literature: An Essay Towards the Re-definition of a Popular/Counter Culture
- Communitarian Agonism Project for a postcolonial Nietzsche
See also: Colonialism, Imperialism, Post-Communism