ABSTRACT

The Routledge Handbook for Global South Studies on Subjectivities provides a series of exemplary studies conjoining perspectives from Asian, African, and Latin American Studies on subjectivity in the Global South as a central category of social and cultural analysis. The contestation of the Northern myth of the autonomous subject—the dispositive that contests subject formation in the South by describing it as fragmented, incomplete, delayed or simply deviant, has been a cornerstone of theory production from the South over the years.

This volume’s contributions offer an interdisciplinary and transarea dialogue, reframing issues of selfhood and alterity, of personhood, of the human, of the commons and contesting the North’s presumption in determining what kind of subjectivities abide by its norms, whose voices are heard, who is recognised as a subject, and, by extension, whose lives matter. In the context of the shifting dynamics of today’s manifold crises, they raise questions regarding how subjectivities act on or resist such forms of contestation, contingency, and indeterminacy.

A major contribution to the growing body of scholarship on the Global South, this handbook will be an essential resource for students, scholars, researchers and instructors in literature, media and culture studies, sociology, anthropology, philosophy, law, politics, visual arts and art history.

part II|45 pages

Articulating Subjectivity from the Global South

chapter 8|17 pages

Defining Legal Subjectivities for a Postcolonial International Order

The International Legal Controversy over Wars of National Liberation

part IV|94 pages

Precarised Subjectivities

chapter 12|30 pages

Figurations of the Precarious

Rethinking Studies on the Precarious in the Global South from a Subject-centred Perspective

chapter 13|15 pages

People-on-the-move

An Emerging Historical Figure?

chapter 14|13 pages

When an Image is a Body

Modes of Surviving the Colonial Machine 1

chapter 15|20 pages

Precarious Lives and the Figure of the Wound in Chilean Literature

Hijo de ladrón (1951) by Manuel Rojas and Lumpérica (1983) by Diamela Eltit

part V|66 pages

Entangled Regimes of Temporality

chapter 18|20 pages

Disruptive Temporality and Post-apocalyptic Subjectivity

Narrating Violence in Tierno Monénembo's Les écailles du ciel 1

chapter 19|13 pages

Questioning the “New” Zimbabwe

Biomythography and Political Subjectivity in Panashe Chigumadzi's These Bones Will Rise Again (2018)

part VI|55 pages

Contesting the Western Subject of Knowledge

chapter 20|11 pages

Zoē-assemblage

Immanent Life in the Age of the Anthropocene

chapter 21|16 pages

Conversing with María Luisa Chacarito

A Ralámuli Woman's Perceptions on Life in an Interconnected World 1

chapter 23|12 pages

Just Thinking