ABSTRACT

This book reclaims postcolonial theory, addressing persistent limitations in the geographical, disciplinary, and methodological assumptions of its dominant formations. It emerges, however, from an investment in the future of postcolonial studies and a commitment to its basic premise: namely, that literature and culture are fundamental to the response to structures of colonial and imperial domination. To a certain extent, postcolonial theory is a victim of its own success, not least because of the institutionalization of the insights that it has enabled. Now that these insights no longer seem new, it is hard to know what the field should address beyond its general commitments. Yet the renewal of popular anti-imperial energies across the globe provides an important opportunity to reassert the political and theoretical value of the postcolonial as a comparative, interdisciplinary, and oppositional paradigm. This collection makes a claim for what postcolonial theory can say through the work of scholars articulating what it still cannot or will not say. It explores ideas that a more aesthetically sophisticated postcolonial theory might be able to address, focusing on questions of visibility, performance, and literariness. Contributors highlight some of the shortcomings of current postcolonial theory in relation to contemporary political developments such as Zimbabwean land reform, postcommunism, and the economic rise of Asia. Finally, they address the disciplinary, geographical, and methodological exclusions from postcolonial studies through a detailed focus on new disciplinary directions (management studies, international relations, disaster studies), overlooked locations and perspectives (Palestine, Weimar Germany, the commons), and the necessity of materialist analysis for understanding both the contemporary world and world literary systems.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

What Postcolonial Theory Doesn't Say

part I|74 pages

Disciplinary Constellations

chapter 1|17 pages

Capitalizing on English Literature

Disciplinarity, Academic Labor and Postcolonial Studies

chapter 2|19 pages

Dangerous Relations?

Lessons from the Interface of Postcolonialism and International Relations

chapter 4|18 pages

Postcolonial Modernism

Shame and National Form

part II|90 pages

Case Studies

chapter 5|18 pages

Gaps, Silences and Absences

Palestine and Postcolonial Studies

chapter 6|16 pages

Facing/Defacing Robert Mugabe

Land Reclamation, Race and the End of Colonial Accountability

chapter 7|20 pages

Staging the Mulata

Performing Cuba

chapter 8|15 pages

Amongst the Cannibals

Articulating Masculinity in Postcolonial Weimar Germany

chapter 9|19 pages

Postcolonial Postcommunism?

part III|82 pages

Horizons

chapter 11|17 pages

Reading Fanon Reading Nature

chapter 14|18 pages

Inherit the World

World-Literature, Rising Asia and the World-Ecology