Introduction to Post-Coloniality Homi Bhabha: The Location of Culture, 1994.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
IR2501 – week 8 lectures II – Postcolonial Studies.
Advertisements

How does political policy shape conception of the other? How can literature revise misconceptions?
General Introduction to Postcolonialism
After the Violencia: Indigenous Activism Kay Warren “Indigenous Movements and their Critics: Pan Mayan Activism in Guatemala” (1998)
CRITICAL PARADIGMS OF SOCIAL RESEARCH
Feminist Theory and Gender Studies
Postcolonialism Introductory Lecture.
+ A Politics of Location Positionality and Ethical Analytical Frameworks.
Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza
Shirin M Rai.  Provocation: how is what we know framed as knowledge through particular systems of representation and the practices of colonial governance.
Multiculturalism and diaspora culture The renewed interest in debates on Third Cinema: from decolonialization to globalization. Erosion of the binary logic.
Citizenship Education and Multiculturalism: The Needs of Educators within the Contemporary Multicultural Context Amanda Simon Newman College of Higher.
Postcolonialism and its Critics
Identity. Concepts of the Individual, self, person in anthropology Individual as member of humankind (biologistic) Self as locus of experience (psychologistic)
Historical Development of Cultural Geography Stephen McFarland.
Introduction to Literary Theory, Feminist and Gender Criticism
Sociology of Gender GenderThrough the Prism of Difference Chapter One: Part two Theorizing Difference from Multiracial Feminism.
Culture, race and ethnicity Anastasia Christou Spring & Summer Terms 2012.
Talking Black: Critical Signs of the Times
Today, you need… ●unit packets ●writing utensil ●highlighter (optional) ** PLEASE, Have your homework out on your desk and ready for me to stamp! **
Dynamics of Theology Faith and the Community of Beliefs.
THE ESSAY: THE 3 LEVELS OF COMPOSITION. AN OVERVIEW OF THE 3 LEVELS  I. LEVEL ONE = MOST THEORETICAL (INCLUDES YOUR THESIS)  II. LEVEL TWO = DEFINED.
“Analysing Gender in Media Texts” or, “Welcome to Media Studies...” By, Gill.
Literary Theory How Do I Evaluate a Text?.
7 th European Feminist Research Conference Utrecht, 4-7 June 2009 GEMIC: A project on Gender, Migration and Intercultural Interactions in the Mediterranean.
Nine Lit Crit Ways of Looking at The Great Gatsby...and the rest of the world Facilitated by a great many quotes from Donald E. Hall’s Literary and Cultural.
What is Popular Culture?. What is Culture? Raymond Williams (1983) Culture refers to: ◦ “A general process of intellectual, spiritual and aesthetic development”
FFocuses on language, structure, and tone IIntrinsic Reading vs. Extrinsic FFormalists study relationship between literary devices and meaning.
Literary Analysis, Criticism and Theory. What is a Literary Analysis? Literary analysis involves breaking a text’s structure and content into smaller.
Introduction to Post-Coloniality Homi Bhabha: The Location of Culture, 1994.
LITERARY THEORY 101.
Orientalism Guest Lecture by Dr. Naveen Minai History of Culture – Winter 2015 Indus Valley School of Art & Architecture.
Homi Bhabha The Location of Culture, Homi Bhabha  Border lives: the Art of the Present  What is theoretically innovative, and politically crucial,
Literary Theory Source - and
Introduction to Post-Coloniality Homi Bhabha: The Location of Culture, 1994.
Warm Up Examine the ink blot on the slide. What do you see in the image? Write down a short explanation of what you see in the space provided. Be prepared.
Dominic Sachsenmaier Global History. Thinking Globally About History Terminological Options World History Transnational History International History.
The British Empire and Commonwealth. The rise of the British Empire 1600 : Exploration of North America and formation of East India Company – influence.
Catherine Hall  Histories, Empires and the Post- Colonial Moment.
 Looks at the “way in which the work of Asian Canadian film and video artists on the West Coast […] has both reflected and helped to constitute as sense.
Human prehistory/history is marked by the impacts of migrations. Whether compelled or drawn beyond their places of origin, migrants have challenged borders.
Gloria Anzaldua Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza.
GENDERING MIGRATION & DIASPORAS RUBA SALIH Gendering Diasporas.
Post-Colonialism From political to cultural independence.
Loomba – The End Post-Modernism and Postcolonial Studies Conclusion.
3. Is Zoroastrianism monotheistic, polytheistic, or animistic?
1 Literary Criticism Exploring literature beneath the surface.
Introduction to Literary Theories and Paragraph Structure Learning Goal: To develop an understanding of postcolonial/cultural theory and effective paragraph.
Critical Theory Today Dr. Rania Khalil KNU - Class # 5 28 June 2011.
Critical Theory Strategies for reading. What is Critical Theory? O Different ways of looking at text (think new lenses) O None is “more right” than another.
Stuart Hall Who Needs ‘Identity’?.
Colonialism’s epilogue Liv Magnien The effects of a nation being invaded and colonized.
TEXT & MEANING Postcolonial Theory. Postcolonial Theory –What it is Focuses on the reading and writing of literature written in previously or currently.
Do Now: Explain the significance of the following quote:
Postcolonialism By Antolin Bonnett and Olivia Rushin.
Feminist Critical Perspective  “I have never been able to find out precisely what feminism is: I only know that people call me a feminist whenever I express.
Understanding Literary Theory and Critical Lenses
POSTCOLONIALISM by Gianluca Serpi. post(-)colonialism  With or without a hyphen o post-colonialism (chronological separation) o Post-colonialism (no.
CRITICAL APPROACHES TO LITERATURE Literary Theory.
Colonialism. What is colonialism/imperialism? Waylen distinguishes ‘old’ and ‘new’ forms of colonialism Old colonialism – late 15 th and 16 th centuries.
Introductory discussion
Cultural Imperialism (1): Theories
African American and Ethnic Literary Criticism
One:The rise of post-colonialism
Lecture Code: PS_L.3 MA English Semester ii (Fall 2018) Postcolonial Studies – Definitions, Issues & Theorists Min Pun, PhD, Associate Professor Dept.
Issues of Subjectivity and Identity
“Welcome to Media Studies”
Postcolonial Literature
Post-Structuralist and Postmodernist Approaches to Gender Theory
Postcolonial Histories
Presentation transcript:

Introduction to Post-Coloniality Homi Bhabha: The Location of Culture, 1994

Post-Coloniality  Homi Bhabha  The postcolonial perspective - as it is being developed by cultural historians and literary theorists - departs from the traditions of the sociology of underdevelopment or 'dependency' theory.  As a mode of analysis, it attempts to revise those nationalists or 'nativist' pedagogies that set up the relation of Third World and First World in a binary structure of opposition.  The postcolonial perspective resists the attempt to holistic forms of social explanation.

Post-Coloniality  Homi Bhabha  It forces a recognition of the more complex cultural and political boundaries that exist on the cusp of these often opposed political spheres.

Post-Coloniality  Homi Bhabha  The postcolonial prerogative consists in reinterpreting and rewriting the forms and effects of an 'older' colonial consciousness from the later experience of the cultural displacement that marks the more recent, postwar histories of the Western metropolis.

Post-Coloniality  Homi Bhabha  Postcolonial perspectives emerge from the colonial testimony of Third World countries and the discourses of 'minorities' within the geopolitical divisions of east and West, North and South.  They intervene in those ideological discourses of modernity that attempt to give a hegemonic 'normality' to an uneven development and the differential, often disadvantaged, histories of nations, races, communities, peoples.

Post-Coloniality  Homi Bhabha  What is theoretically innovative, and politically crucial, is the need to think beyond narratives of originary and initial subjectivities and to focus on those moments or processes that are produced in the articulation of cultural differences.  ‘In-between' spaces provide the terrain for elaborating strategies of selfhood -singular or communal- that initiate new signs of identity, and innovative sites of collaboration, and contestation, in the act of defining the idea of society itself.

Post-Coloniality  Homi Bhabha  The representation of difference must not be hastily read as the reflection of pre-given ethnic or cultural traits set in the fixed tablet of tradition.  Political empowerment, and the enlargement of the multiculturalist cause, come from posing questions of solidarity and community from the intersitial perspective.

Post-Coloniality  Homi Bhabha  Social differences are the signs of the emergence of community envisaged as a project - at once a vision and a construction that takes you 'beyond' yourself in order to return, in a spirit of revision and reconstruction, to the political conditions of the present.  'Beyond' signifies spatial distance, marks progress, promises the future.  The beyond challenges the homogeneity of cultural essentialism.

Post-Coloniality  Homi Bhabha  The very concepts of homogeneous national cultures, the consensual or contiguous transmission of historical traditions, or 'organic' ethnic communities - as the grounds of cultural comparativism - are in a profound process of redefinition.  Being in the 'beyond', then, is to inhabit an intervining space.  But to dwell 'in the beyond' is also, as I have shown, to be part of a revisionary time, a return to the present to redescribe our cultural contemporaneity; to reinscribe our human, historic commonality.

Post-Coloniality  Homi Bhabha  In that sense, then, the intervining space 'beyond', becomes a space of intervention in the here and now.  To engage with such invention, and intervention [...] requires a sense of the new that resonates with the hybrid [...] aesthetic....  The study of world literature might be the study of the way in which cultures recognize themselves through their projections of ‘otherness’.

Post-Coloniality  Homi Bhabha  Where, once, the transmission of national traditions was the major theme of world literature, perhaps we can now suggest that transnational histories of migrants, the colonized, or political refugees these border and frontier conditions - may be the terrains of world literature.  The centre of such a study would neither be the 'sovereignty' of national cultures, nor the universalism of human culture, but the focus on those 'freak social and cultural displacements' that Morrison and Gordimer represent in their 'unhomley' fictions.

Post-Coloniality  Homi Bhabha  For the critic must attempt to fully realize, and take responsibility for, the unspoken, unrepresented pasts that haunt the historical present.  Finally, the question of identification is never the affirmation of a pregiven identity, never a self- fulfilling prophecy - it is always the production of an image of identity and the transformation of the subject in assuming that image.  How can the human world live End

Introduction to Post-Coloniality Gayatry Chakravorty Spivak

Post-Coloniality Gayatry Chakravorty Spivak We post-colonial intellectuals are told that we are ‘too’ Western, and what goes completely unnoticed is that our turn to the West is in response to a command, whereas the other is to an extent a desire marking the place of the management of a crisis. I could easily construct, then, a sort of 'pure East' as a 'pure universal' or as a 'pure institution' so that I could then define myself as the Easterner, as the marginal or as specific, or as the para-institutional.

Post-Coloniality Gayatry Chakravorty Spivak That's one of my projects of unlearning my privilege, because in fact what is being done is that this kind of psychoanalytic discourse is being imposed upon the woman elsewhere. Also it seems to me what's being imposed on the woman elsewhere upon the other side of her more privileged ethnic sisters is a sort of glorification of sexual division of labour in other kinds of patriarchal/patrilinean/patrilocal societies, in opposition to the kind of space we inhabit.

Post-Coloniality Gayatry Chakravorty Spivak 'India', for people like me, is not really a place with which they can form a national identity because it has always been an artificial construct. If I can't keep my hands theoretically clean anyway, why not take the centre when I'm being asked to be marginal? I'm never defined as a marginal in India, I can assure you.

Post-Coloniality Gayatry Chakravorty Spivak What is an indigenous theory? I cannot understand what indigenous theory there might be that can ignore the reality of nineteenth-century history. To construct indigenous theories one must ignore the last few centuries of historical involvement. I would rather use what history has written for me.

Post-Coloniality Gayatry Chakravorty Spivak I am not interested in defending the post-colonial intellectual's dependence on Western models: my work lies in making clear my disciplinary predicament. My position is generally a reactive one. I am viewed by the Marxists as too codic, by feminists as too male- identified, by indigenous theorists as too committed to Western theory.

Post-Coloniality Gayatry Chakravorty Spivak I am uneasily pleased about this. One's vigilance is sharpened by the way one is perceived, but it does not involve defending oneself. As far as I can understand, in order to intervene one must negotiate. If there is anything I have learnt in and through the last 23 years of teaching, it is that the more vulnerable your position, the more you have to negotiate.

Post-Coloniality Gayatry Chakravorty Spivak What we are asking for is that the hegemonic discourses, the holders of hegemonic discourse should de-hegemonize their position and themselves learn how to occupy the subject position of the other rather than simply say, "O.K., sorry, we are just very good white people, therefore we do not speak for the blacks." That is what was reflected when I refused marginalization when there were questions form the floor about my practice and so on.

Post-Coloniality Gayatry Chakravorty Spivak One of the things I said was that one of my projects is not to allow myself to occupy the place of the marginal that you would like to see me in, because then that allows you to feel that you have an other to speak to.