ABSTRACT

We must, many now argue, `get back' to history. but which one? History has always been a problematical concept in Western theory, particularly for Marxism. In the wake of postmodernism, its status has become ever less certain. Is it possible to write history that avoids the trap of Eurocentrism?
Robert Young's investigation of 'the history of History', from Hegel and Marx to Althusser and Foucault, calls into question the Eurocentrism of traditional Marxist accounts of a single 'World History', in which, as he shows, the `Third World' appears as an unassimilable excess, surplus to the narrative of the West.
Young goes on to consider recent questionings of the limits of Western knowledge. He argues that the efforts of Edward Said, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak and Homi Bhabha to formulate non-historicist ways of thinking and writing history are part of a larger project of a decolonisation of History and a deconstruction of 'the West'.

chapter |31 pages

WHITE MYTHOLOGIES REVISITED

chapter 1|21 pages

WHITE MYTHOLOGIES

chapter 2|8 pages

MARXISM AND THE QUESTION OF HISTORY

chapter 3|22 pages

SARTRE’S EXTRAVAGANCES

chapter 4|22 pages

The scientific critique of historicism

chapter 5|23 pages

FOUCAULT’S PHANTASMS

chapter 6|30 pages

THE JAMESON RAID

chapter 7|23 pages

DISORIENTING ORIENTALISM

chapter 8|18 pages

THE AMBIVALENCE OF BHABHA

chapter 9|20 pages

SPIVAK: DECOLONIZATION, DECONSTRUCTION