Title: POSTCOLONIALISM
1POSTCOLONIALISM
2- Definition
- Context
- Themes
- Literature
- Representants
- Text
- Today
3- Post-colonialism is an umbrella term
-
POST -
- ISM
- COLONIAL -
It is a Latinate prefix referring to something
coming after something and, therefore,
Post-colonialism is a movement referring to
something previous.
Post The second part of the term refers to
Colonialism. Since Post-colonialism comes after
Colonialism.
The suffix ism generally brings with it a
critical attitude. As a matter of fact, when a
new movement rises, since it sounds rather
strange and it is not immediately well accepted.
- Postcolonialism, like other post-isms, does not
signal a closing off of that which it contains
(colonialism), or even a rejection, but rather an
opening of a field of inquiry and understanding
following a period of relative closure.
4Postcolonialism and Postcolonial Literature
- a period of time after colonialism
- postcolonial literature characterized by its
opposition to the colonial. - It deals with literature produced in countries
that once were colonies of other countries,
?bEuropean colonial powers (Britain, France, and
Spain) - in some contexts, it includes countries still in
colonial arrangements. - it also deals with literature written in
colonial countries - It is about their citizens colonized people as
subject matter.
5Further definition
- the social, political, economic, and cultural
practices which arise in response and resistance
to colonialism - ? an always present tendency in any literature of
subjugation marked by a systematic process of
cultural domination through the imposition of
imperial structures of power.
6- European colonialism began in the 15th century,
with Portugal's conquest of Ceuta, Portuguese and
Spanish exploration of the Americas, and the
coasts of Africa, the Middle East, India, and
East Asia. - The latter half of the sixteenth century
witnessed the expansion of the English state
throughout Ireland - the 17th century France and the Netherlands
successfully established their own overseas
empires - The end of the 18th and early 19th century saw
the first era of decolonization - Britain, France and the Netherlands turned their
attention to the Old World - The industrialization of the 19th century led to
what has been termed the era of New Imperialism.
7- Postcolonialism includes a vast array of writers
and subjects. It mainly focuses on - the need in nations or groups which have been
colonized to achieve an uncontaminated identity - the relations and the effects of racism
- racism or history of genocide, including
slavery, apartheid and mass extinction - the relationship between postcolonialism and
feminism - how a colonized people's knowledge served the
colonizers interests, and how the subordinate
people's knowledge is generated and used - the ways in which the colonist's literature
justified colonialism via images of the colonized
as a perpetually inferior person, society, and
culture -
8Summarizing
- the need, in nations, or groups which have been
victims of imperialism - to achieve an identity uncontaminated
- by universalist or Eurocentric concepts or
images.
9- Postcolonial texts
- will incorporate culturally specific details,
often not offering translations or explanations
of non-European practices, de-centering the
European-based reading. - In addition, the texts very often decenter the
white characters, who become faceless, nameless
representatives of a dominating power, shifting
the power relationships within the text. - Finally, it is most important to stress the ever
changing nature of postcolonialism as a defining
term, as it responds to the material conditions
under which people live in colonial and
neo-colonial situations.
10- J.M. Coetzee
- Daniel Defoe
11- Foe (J.M. Coetzee)
- Robinson Crusoe (Daniel Defoe)
12- Colonization as a modern phenomenon
- modern colonialism was not a discrete occurrence
- an examination of pre-modern colonial activities
will allow for more complex understanding of
modern structures of power and domination, - they may illuminate the operation of older
histories in the context of both modern
colonialism and contemporary race and global
political relations.