Posts and Pasts: A Theory of Postcolonialism
In Posts and Pasts: A Theory of Postcolonialism, Alfred J. Lopez argues for a formulation of postcolonial studies which diverges in three significant ways from current academic and institutional practices: 1) the postcolonial as diasporic, constituted by a series of dispersed and irregular criticisms not at all containable within a single set of parameters, whether historical, geographical, or socioeconomic; 2) the postcolonial as a distinct ontological moment in the life of a nation or people, in which it conceives itself as doubly haunted--on the one hand by the "memory in advance" of a collective national future and on the other by its colonial past; and 3) the postcolonial as a distinct phenomenological moment, a radical break in the history of a relation between lords and bonds-women and -men.

Going further than previous studies to address the postcolonial as a diasporic body of texts and discourses, it looks at a remarkable variety of writers—Joseph Conrad, Wilson Harris, Jose Marti, Edward Kamau Brathwaite, Michelle Cliff, J. M. Coetzee, Franz Fanon, Gabriel Marcia Marquez, and Salman Rushdie.
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Posts and Pasts: A Theory of Postcolonialism
In Posts and Pasts: A Theory of Postcolonialism, Alfred J. Lopez argues for a formulation of postcolonial studies which diverges in three significant ways from current academic and institutional practices: 1) the postcolonial as diasporic, constituted by a series of dispersed and irregular criticisms not at all containable within a single set of parameters, whether historical, geographical, or socioeconomic; 2) the postcolonial as a distinct ontological moment in the life of a nation or people, in which it conceives itself as doubly haunted--on the one hand by the "memory in advance" of a collective national future and on the other by its colonial past; and 3) the postcolonial as a distinct phenomenological moment, a radical break in the history of a relation between lords and bonds-women and -men.

Going further than previous studies to address the postcolonial as a diasporic body of texts and discourses, it looks at a remarkable variety of writers—Joseph Conrad, Wilson Harris, Jose Marti, Edward Kamau Brathwaite, Michelle Cliff, J. M. Coetzee, Franz Fanon, Gabriel Marcia Marquez, and Salman Rushdie.
26.49 In Stock
Posts and Pasts: A Theory of Postcolonialism

Posts and Pasts: A Theory of Postcolonialism

by Alfred J. Lopez
Posts and Pasts: A Theory of Postcolonialism

Posts and Pasts: A Theory of Postcolonialism

by Alfred J. Lopez

eBook

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Overview

In Posts and Pasts: A Theory of Postcolonialism, Alfred J. Lopez argues for a formulation of postcolonial studies which diverges in three significant ways from current academic and institutional practices: 1) the postcolonial as diasporic, constituted by a series of dispersed and irregular criticisms not at all containable within a single set of parameters, whether historical, geographical, or socioeconomic; 2) the postcolonial as a distinct ontological moment in the life of a nation or people, in which it conceives itself as doubly haunted--on the one hand by the "memory in advance" of a collective national future and on the other by its colonial past; and 3) the postcolonial as a distinct phenomenological moment, a radical break in the history of a relation between lords and bonds-women and -men.

Going further than previous studies to address the postcolonial as a diasporic body of texts and discourses, it looks at a remarkable variety of writers—Joseph Conrad, Wilson Harris, Jose Marti, Edward Kamau Brathwaite, Michelle Cliff, J. M. Coetzee, Franz Fanon, Gabriel Marcia Marquez, and Salman Rushdie.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780791490525
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Publication date: 05/16/2001
Series: SUNY series, Explorations in Postcolonial Studies
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 288
File size: 499 KB

About the Author

Alfred J. Lopez is Assistant Professor of English at Florida International University.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction Posts and Pasts

Chapter One
“The Other! The Other!”: Conrad,Wilson Harris, and the Postcolonial “Threshold of Capacity”

Chapter Two
Specters of the Nation: Resistance, Criollismo, and the Ambivalence of the “Neo-”

Chapter Three
Whiteness and the Colonial Unconscious

Chapter Four
“Toward a New Humanism. . . .”: Fanon, Hegel, and the Crisis of Mastery

Chapter Five
Reason, “the Native,” and Desire: A Theory of “Magical Realism”

Conclusion
Magic, “Realism,” and the “Post-”

Notes

Biblography

Index
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