Postcolonialism An Historical Introduction 1st Edition by Robert JC Young – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 0631200711, 9780631200710
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Product details:
ISBN 10: 0631200711
ISBN 13: 9780631200710
Author: Robert JC Young
This seminal work–now available in a 15th anniversary edition with a new preface–is a thorough introduction to the historical and theoretical origins of postcolonial theory.
- Provides a clearly written and wide-ranging account of postcolonialism, empire, imperialism, and colonialism, written by one of the leading scholars on the topic
- Details the history of anti-colonial movements and their leaders around the world, from Europe and Latin America to Africa and Asia
- Analyzes the ways in which freedom struggles contributed to postcolonial discourse by producing fundamental ideas about the relationship between non-western and western societies and cultures
- Offers an engaging yet accessible style that will appeal to scholars as well as introductory students
Postcolonialism An Historical Introduction 1st Table of contents:
1. Colonialism and the Politics of Postcolonial Critique
Part I: Concepts in History
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Colonialism
1. Colonialism and Imperialism: Defining the Terms
2. Colonization and Domination -
Imperialism
1. The French Invention of Imperialism
2. Differences in Imperial Ideologies and Colonial Systems
3. British Imperialism
4. Greater Britain
5. American Imperialism -
Neocolonialism
1. Neocolonialism: The Last Stage of Imperialism
2. Development and Dependency Theory
3. Critical Development Theory -
Postcolonialism
1. States
2. Location
3. Knowledge
4. Language
Part II: European Anti‑colonialism
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Las Casas to Bentham
1. The Humanitarian Objection
2. The Economic Objection -
Nineteenth‑Century Liberalism
1. Nineteenth‑Century Anti‑Colonialism in France: Algeria and the Mission Civilisatrice
2. Nineteenth‑Century Anti‑Colonialism in Britain
3. India
4. Ireland
5. J. A. Hobson’s Imperialism: A Study -
Marx on Colonialism and Imperialism
1. Colonialism and Imperialism in Marx
2. Marxist Theories of Imperialism
Part III: The Internationals
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Socialism and Nationalism
1. The First and Second Internationals
2. “Bin gar keine Russin, stamm’ aus Litauen, echt Deutsch”: Socialism and Nationalism
3. The Russian Revolution: Marxism and the National Question -
The Third International, to the Baku Congress of the Peoples of the East
1. The Formation of the Third International
2. The Second Congress, July–August 1920
3. The Baku Congress, September 1920 -
The Women’s International, the Third and the Fourth Internationals
1. The Internationals and the Communist Women’s Movement
2. The Third Congress of the Comintern, June–July 1921
3. The Fourth Congress of the Comintern, November–December 1922
4. The Fifth Congress of the Comintern, July 1924
5. The Sixth and Seventh Congresses of the Comintern, 1928 and 1935
6. Trotsky and the Fourth International
Part IV: Theoretical Practices of the Freedom Struggles
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The National Liberation Movements
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Marxism and the National Liberation Movements
1. Abdel‑Malek on Marxism and the Liberation Movements
2. Period One: to 1928
3. Period Two: 1928–1945
4. Period Three: After 1945 -
China, Egypt, Bandung
1. Mao and the Chinese Revolution
2. Contradiction in Mao
3. The Cultural Revolution
4. Egypt
5. Nasser
6. The Bandung Conference of 1955 -
Latin America I
1. Marxism in Latin America
2. Mexico 1910
3. Mariátegui
4. Cultural Dependency -
Latin America II
1. Compañero: Che Guevara
2. New Man
3. The Tricontinental -
Africa I
1. Pre‑Communist African Anti‑Colonialism
2. The Influence of African‑American and African‑Caribbean Radicals
3. Communist Activity in Africa
4. South Africa
5. Padmore and James -
Africa II
1. The 1945 Manchester Pan‑African Congress
2. African Socialism
3. Nkrumah
4. Nyerere
5. From ‘Positive Action’ to Violence -
Africa III
1. France Between the Wars
2. Anti‑Colonial Activists: Houénou, Senghor and Garan Kouyaté
3. Tovalou Houénou and the Ligue Universelle de Défense de la Race Noire (LDRN)
4. Lamine Senghor and the Comité de Défense de la Race Nègre (CDRN)
5. Tiémoko Garan Kouyaté and the Ligue de Défense de la Race Nègre (LDRN)
6. The Cultural Turn: Négritude
7. Léopold Senghor -
Africa IV
1. Frantz Fanon
2. Fanon and Francophone African Political Thought
3. Fanon and Algeria
4. Fanon and Violence
5. Cabral: Culture as Resistance and Liberation
6. The Weapon of Theory
7. The Role of Culture -
The Subject of Violence
1. Subject, Subjection
2. Violence, Violation
3. Nervous Conditions
4. Ireland: Assimilation and Violence
5. Ireland and Postcolonial Theory
6. “Ireland Lost, the British ‘Empire’ Is Gone”: James Connolly and the Easter Rebellion of 1916 -
India I
1. The Uniqueness of the Indian Independence Movement
2. Indian Socialism: From Socialism to Sarvodaya
3. Marxism in India -
India II
1. Cultural Nationalism
2. Ahimsa: Violence and Non‑Violence
3. Gandhi’s Alternative Political Strategies
4. The Dandi March
5. Gandhi in Lancashire
Part V: Formations of Postcolonial Theory
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India III
1. Gandhi’s Invisibility
2. Intimate Enemy
3. Derivative Discourse
4. Hybridity: As Form and Strategy
5. Samas and Hybridity
6. The Historical Strategy of Indian Postcolonial Theorists
7. Subaltern Studies
8. Subalterns of the Subalterns: Engendering New Kinds of History and Politics -
Women, Gender and Anti‑colonialism
1. The Role of Women in the Anti‑Colonial Movements
2. The Relation of Feminisms to the Ideologies of the Freedom Struggle
3. Socialism
4. Modernity
5. Cultural Nationalism
6. The Challenges for Feminist Politics after Independence -
Edward Said and Colonial Discourse
1. Discourse and Power in Said
2. The Objections to “Colonial Discourse”
3. Discourse in Linguistics -
Foucault in Tunisia
1. Foucault’s Silence: Sidi‑Bou‑Saïd and the Context of the Archaeology
2. Discourse in Foucault
3. The Discursive Formation
4. The Statement
5. The Regularities, Enunciative Modalities and Formation of Objects
6. The Heterogeneity of Discourse
7. Discourse and Power in the History of Sexuality
8. A Foucauldian Model of Colonial Discourse -
Subjectivity and History
1. White Mythologies Revisited
2. Make the Old Shell Crack
3. Structuralism, “Primitive” Rationality and Deconstruction
4. Pillar of Salt
5. The Marrano: “A Little Black and Very Arab Jew Who Understood Nothing About I—
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