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2.3 Postcolonial / Subaltern TheoryBérubé, Michael. 2002. Worldly English. Modern Fiction Studies 48.1: 1-17. Beverly, John. 2000. The dilemma of subaltern studies at Duke. Nepantia: Views from the South 1.1: 33-44. Brett, Michael. 1994. Anglo-Saxon attitudes: The Algerian War of Independence in retrospect. Journal of African History 35.2: 217-35. Chambers, Iain. 1999. History after humanism: responding to postcolonialism. Postcolonial Studies 2.1: 37-42. Chun, Allen. 2000. (Post)colonialism and its discontents, or the future of practice. Cultural Studies 14.3/4: 379-84. Coronil, Fernando. 1994. Listening to the subaltern: The poetics of neocolonial states. Poetics Today 15.4: 643-58. Devadas, Vijay, and Brett Nicholls. 2002. Postcolonial interventions: Gayatri Spivak, three wise men and the native informant. Critical Horizons 3.1: 73-101. During, Simon. 2000. Postcolonialism and globalization: Towards a historicization of the inter-relation. Cultural Studies 14.3/4: 385-404. Figuera, Dorothy. 2000. The profits of postcolonialism. Comparative Literature 52.3: 246-54. Gelder, Ken. 2000. Postcolonial voodoo. Postcolonial Studies 3.1: 89-98. Grossberg, Lawrence. 2000. The figure of subalternity and the neoliberal future. Nepantia: Views from the South 1.1: 59-89. Gupta, Prasenjit. 1998. Post- or neo-colonial translation? Linguistic inequality and translator’s resistance. Translation & Literature 7.2: 170-93. Hassan, Ihab. 1998. Queries for postcolonial studies. Philosophy and Literature 22.2: 328-42. Hassan, Salah D. 2001. Canons after “postcolonial studies.” Pedagogy 1.2: 297-304. Harootunian, H. D. 1999. Postcoloniality’s unconscious / area studies’ desire. Postcolonial Studies 2.2: 127-47. Huddart, David. 2001. Making an example of Spivak. Angelaki: Journal of the Theoretical Humanities 6.1: 35-46. Huggan, Graham. 1994. Anthropologists and other frauds. Comparative Literature 46.2: 113-28. Kapoor, Ilan. 2002. Capitalism, culture, agency: Dependency versus postcolonial theory. Third World Quarterly 23.4: 647-64. Mallon, Florencia E. 1994. The promise and dilemma of subaltern studies: Perspectives from Latin American history. American Historical Review 99.5: 1491-1515. †Mardorossian, Carine M. 1999. Shutting up the subaltern. Callaloo 22.4: 1071-90. McCarthy, Cameron, and Greg Dimitriadis. 2000. The work of art in the postcolonial imagination. Discourse Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education 21.1: 59-74. Mignolo, Walter D. 1999. I am where I think: Epistemology and the colonial difference. Journal of Latin American Cultural Studies 8.2: 235-45. Ochoa, Peggy. 1996. The historical moments of postcolonial writing: Beyond colonialism’s binary. Tulsa Studies in Women’s Literature 15.2: 221-29. Olaniyan, Tejumola. 1993. On “post-colonial discourse.” Callaloo 16.4:743-49. Prakash, Gyan. 1992. Can the “subaltern” ride? A reply to O’Hanlon and Washbrook. Comparative Studies in Society and History 34.1: 168-84. ----------. 1994. Subaltern studies as postcolonial criticism. American Historical Review 99.5: 1457-90. ----------. 1996. Who’s afraid of postcoloniality? Social Text, no. 49: 187-203. ----------. 2000. The impossibility of subaltern history. Nepantia: Views from the South 1.2: 287-94. Radhakrishnan, R. 1993. Postcoloniality and the boundaries of identity. Callaloo 16.4: 750-71. Scott, David. 1996. The aftermath of sovereignty: Postcolonial criticism and the claims of political modernity. Social Text, no. 48: 1-26. Seed, Patricia. 1993. More colonial and postcolonial discourses. Latin American Research Review 28.3: 146-52. Shohat, Ella. 1992. Notes on the “post-colonial.” Social Text, no. 31/32: 99-113. †Sparke, Matthew. 2002. Between post-colonialism and cross-border regionalism. Space & Polity 6.2: 203-13. Sylvester, Christine. 1999. Development studies and postcolonial studies: Disparate tales of the “Third World.”Third World Quarterly 20.4: 703-21. ----------. 1999. In-between and in evasion of so much: Third World literatures, international relations and postcolonial analysis. Postcolonial Studies 2.2: 249-61. Xie, Shaobe. 1997. Rethinking the problem of postcolonialism. New Literary History 28.1: 7-19. See also 1: Spanos; 1.2: Chew; Dirlik; 1.3: West; 2.2: Shih; 3.3: Cheah; Gikandi; 3.4: Moreiras; 3.5: Werbner; 3.8: Chen; 3.9 Orientalism; 3.12: Appiah; Wang; 3.13: Cowlishaw; 3.14.2: Barkan; Lipkin; 3.16: Lionnet; 4.5 Frantz Fanon
Arisaka, Yoko. 1997. Beyond “East and West”: Nishida’s universalism and postcolonial critique. Review of Politics 59.3: 541-60. Brandt, Kim. 2000. Objects of desire: Japanese collectors and colonial Korea. Positions: East Asia Cultures Critique 8.3: 711-46. Napier, Susan J. 2001. Confronting master narratives: History as vision in Miyazaki Hayao’s cinema of deassurance. Positions: East Asia Cultures Critiques 9.2: 467-93. Refsing, Kirsten. 2000. Lost Aryans? John Batchelor and the colonization of the Ainu language. Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies 2.1: 21-34. Tai, Eika. 1999. Kokugo and colonial education in Taiwan. Positions: East Asia Cultures Critique 7.2: 503-40. See also 1.2: Burgess; 3.9.1 Orientalism and Japan; 3.11.1: Iwabuchi; 3.14.1: Guth |
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