Table of Contents
Volume II: Part Four National, Third World and Postcolonial Identities 4.1 On National Culture 4.2 National Liberation and Culture 4.3 Nationalism and the Third World 4.4 Cross-Cultural Poetics 4.5 Towards a New Oceania 4.6 The Language of African Literature 4.7 Third-World Literature in the Era of Multinational Capitalism 4.8 Jameson’s Rhetoric of Otherness and the "National Allegory" 4.9 A Brief Response 4.10 Census, Map, Museum 4.11 DissemiNation: Time, Narrative, and the Margins of the Modern Nation 4.12 Is There A Third World Aesthetic? 4.13 Unapproved Roads: Ireland and Post-Colonial Identity 4.14 Modern Ireland: Post-Colonial Society or Post-Colonial Pretensions? PART 5 Colonial Discourse Analysis 5.1 The Great Family of Man 5.2 Preface to The Colonizer and the Colonized 5.3 Mythical Portrait of the Colonized 5.4 Preface to the English Edition and Apology for Duckology 5.5 Three Women’s Texts and a Critique of Imperialism 5.6 Problems in Current Theories of Colonial Discourse 5.7 White Mythologies 5.8 The Primitivist and the Postcolonial 5.9 Colonial Studies and the History of Sexuality