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OverviewPostcoloniality, Globalization, and Diaspora: What's Next? looks forward within the field of postcolonial studies and goes beyond the notion of hybridity and postcolonial reason beyond just portraying it.This volume offers a futuristic vision going beyond the common paradigms of postcolonility, diaspora, and globalization, speculating a framework beyond master-slave dialectic. This new paradigm locates a humanitarian space purifying ego through various forms: writing, philosophizing, and theorizing new ideas. Authors focus on writers from Mauritius to India. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Ashmita Khasnabish , Markus Arnold , Paget Henry , Ashmita KhasnabishPublisher: Lexington Books Imprint: Lexington Books Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.80cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.213kg ISBN: 9781498570251ISBN 10: 1498570259 Pages: 140 Publication Date: 05 April 2023 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviews"The essays in this collection trace the progression from the constructs of postcolonialism through to globalization and pose the question: what comes next? The contributors represent a wide geographical and cultural area and a wide range of expertise. The subject matter of these essays is equally far-reaching, focusing on the movement toward environmental stewardship among the first peoples of New Zealand to hybridity in Mauritius so complex that it defies that category. What draws these disparate essays into a whole is their common emphasis -- while laying out the trajectory in literary and cultural studies from postcolonialsm and post structuralism to globalism, they all note the strictures of these paradigms: the focus on subalternity, the post-structuralist imposition of Western interpretive frameworks on non-Western thought, the globalization that flattens out difference in an effort to smooth largely economic exchanges. In different ways these essays leave behind subalternity and erasure of difference to propose constructs of egalitarian exchange, based upon alternative ""discursive centers"" more confidently asserted. And as several of the authors assert, the establishment of such discursive centers is ""at its core a metaphysical undertaking."" The stance underlying these essays is that expressed by the editor in the preface: What is wrong with optimism? There are many things to praise in this project: It provides scholars with a clear and firm vision of what a postcolonial studies of the future might look like, moving us beyond an aesthetics of crisis pegged on hybridity and dispersal to one informed by psychological unity, synthesis, and sublimity. Looking towards the future rather than the past, the book is a bold reflection on what is lost and gained when postcolonialism, diaspora, and globalization are located at the center of our rethinking of alternative communities." "The essays in this collection trace the progression from the constructs of postcolonialism through to globalization and pose the question: what comes next? The contributors represent a wide geographical and cultural area and a wide range of expertise. The subject matter of these essays is equally far-reaching, focusing on the movement toward environmental stewardship among the first peoples of New Zealand to hybridity in Mauritius so complex that it defies that category. What draws these disparate essays into a whole is their common emphasis -- while laying out the trajectory in literary and cultural studies from postcolonialsm and post structuralism to globalism, they all note the strictures of these paradigms: the focus on subalternity, the post-structuralist imposition of Western interpretive frameworks on non-Western thought, the globalization that flattens out difference in an effort to smooth largely economic exchanges. In different ways these essays leave behind subalternity and erasure of difference to propose constructs of egalitarian exchange, based upon alternative ""discursive centers"" more confidently asserted. And as several of the authors assert, the establishment of such discursive centers is ""at its core a metaphysical undertaking."" The stance underlying these essays is that expressed by the editor in the preface: What is wrong with optimism? --Christine Evans, Professor of Comparative Literature, Lesley College There are many things to praise in this project: It provides scholars with a clear and firm vision of what a postcolonial studies of the future might look like, moving us beyond an aesthetics of crisis pegged on hybridity and dispersal to one informed by psychological unity, synthesis, and sublimity. Looking towards the future rather than the past, the book is a bold reflection on what is lost and gained when postcolonialism, diaspora, and globalization are located at the center of our rethinking of alternative communities. --Simon Gikandi, Robert Schirmer Professor of English, Princeton University" Author InformationAshmita Khasnabish is lecturer at Lasell University and visiting scholar at Oxford University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |