ABSTRACT

In the last half century, economics has taken over from anthropology the role of drawing the powerful conceptual worldviews that organize knowledge and inform policy in both domestic and international contexts. Until now however, the colonial roots of economic theory have remained relatively unstudied. This book changes that.
The wide array of contributions to this book draw on the rapidly growing body of postcolonial studies to critique both orthodox and heterodox economics. This book addresses a large gap in postcolonial studies, which lacks the type of sophisticated analysis of economic questions that it displays in its analysis of culture. The intellectual and disciplinary terrain covered within this book spans economics, history, anthropology, philosophy, literary theory, political science and women's studies.

part |18 pages

Introduction

part I|52 pages

The space of postcoloniality

part II|71 pages

Economics as a colonial discourse of modernity

chapter 3|18 pages

Classical political economy and orientalism

Nassau Senior's eastern tours *

chapter 4|22 pages

Trading bodies, trade in bodies

The 1878 Paris World Exhibition as economic discourse

part III|70 pages

Economics as a contemporary hegemonic discourse

chapter 6|20 pages

The hungry ghost

IMF policy, global capitalist transformation, and laboring bodies in Southeast Asia

chapter 7|18 pages

Orientalism and economic methods

(Re)reading feminist economic discussions of Islam *

chapter 8|15 pages

Writing economic theory anotherway

chapter |6 pages

Creating spaces

A comment on contemporary discourses in economics

part IV|68 pages

Toward a non-modernist economic analysis

chapter 9|20 pages

Hybrid thinking

Bringing postcolonial theory to colonial Latin American economic history *

chapter 10|18 pages

Hegemony, ambivalence, and class subjectivity

Southern planters in sharecropping relations in the post-bellum United States

chapter 11|18 pages

Contested states, transnational subjects

Toward a Post Keynesianism without modernity *

chapter |4 pages

Econometrics and postcolonial theory

A comment on the fluidity of race

chapter |6 pages

Hybridity, hegemony, and heterodoxy

A new world