Title: Post-Colonialisms (II)
1Post-Colonialisms (II)
- (Post-)Colonial Identities and Strategies of
Resistance
1. Colonialism, Orientalism and Racism 3.
Hybridity and the Other Postcolonial Questions
2Starting Questions
- Any questions about your readings?
- What have you learned so far re. colonialism and
postcolonialism?
3Outline
- A Review and Overview
- Colonial Racial Identities
- Postcolonial Identities
4Post-Colonialism A Review and Overview
- Colonialisms Racism
- Problems with the term post-colonial (textbook
4 290-94) - Definitions Their Interconnections (thru
capitalism) - Cultural Imperialism (Orientalism) examples of
Colonial Other (e.g. Stedman) - Racism Stereotypes Containment and
Appropriation. - New Colonial Identities and their Revision
- Race and Representation
- Mimicry and the Subaltern
- 2. Post-Colonial Identities
- Language Literature
- History
- Identity Construction
- Strategies
- Examples of identity politics
5Colonial Texts/Identities their Revisions
- Major Texts frequently revised
- The Tempest, --17th c. usurpation and
abandonment (Caliban) - Robinson Crusoe 18th c. a colony established
(Friday) Foe by J. M. Coetzee - Jane Eyre, -- 19th c a woman brought back home.
(Other in the Self Bertha) WSS - Heart of Darkness. --20th c.material
pursuit/spiritual disintegration (Kurtz Self
discovery black mistress and the intended.) - Mansfield Park (Sir Thomas textbook 3 275-76)
- Ways of revision
- re-defined certain features of colonizers or
colonial relations, or re-centering some ignored
characters
6 The Tempests
- Contemporary revisions (general trends)
Prospero De-privileged
Miranda (actually the most powerless) Supported by sisters Gang-raped
Ariel Queered
Caliban Rise to power queered
Present, with her magic
Sycorax
7The TempestsPostcolonial Interpretations (1)
- Ethnopsychiatry (D. O. Mannoni)
- Caliban complex that of inferiority and
dependency - When thou cam'st first,Thou strok'st me and
made much of me wouldst give meWater with
berries in't and teach me howTo name the bigger
light, and how the less,That burn by day and
night and then I lov'd thee,And show'd thee all
the qualities o' th' isle,The fresh springs,
brine-pits, barren place, and fertile. - . . . and here you sty meIn this hard
rock,
8Ethnopsychiatry Caliban complex
- that of inferiority and dependency
- Gifts with self-interest ? return of love and
Dependency ? betrayal or demands of more gifts
from the colonized (textbook 4 278) - Use and abuse the language taught (281)
- Another interpretation by F. Fanon in The
Wretched of the Earth - Caliban needs to use violence
--cathartic violence to cleanse him of his
inferiority complex.
9Ethnopsychiatry (2) Prospero complex
- that of inferiority/superiority and
escape/vocation - Hidden in the assumptions of the superiority of
European culture - Inability to adapt to reality ? flight from home
or with a desire to travel - Excessive idealism.
- Prospero anxiety (over Calibans rebellion) and
sexual guilt (over the possibility of incest?
thus feeling threatened by both Ferdinand and
Caliban in their confidence in their sexual
appeal.) (Zabus 22-23)
10Ethnopsychiatry (3) Prospero complex
- Do you agree with this interpretation?
- Can you find examples of people with Caliban
complex or Prospero complex? (textbook 4 279) - There are variations in the interpretation of
these two prototypes. But Prosperofor whatever
reasonsattempts to subject the Other, and the
two are caught in a master-slave mutual
dependency. - How about Ariel and Miranda?
- Miranda, one of the two children of Prospero
(280) - Ariel -- Intellectual Go-between (messenger)
- Type-casting can always be limiting and
simplifying, despite the truths they reveal about
some people.
11Race Definition (textbook 4 285-86)
- Constructionism Racial attributes (e.g. what
being a Chinese means) not seen as naturally
born, but as socially acquired. (e.g. Focus,
Black Like Me) - The classification (biological) of humans into
races is now widely regarded as arbitrary from a
biological viewpoint because actual genetic
differences between racial groups are trivial. - e.g. Up from Slavery, Black Like Me, Focus
- 2. However, racial groups are real in a
sociological sense insofar as people with
different skin colour, etc., are commonly
positioned and treated differently.
(www.soc-canada.com/ppp/ch09.ppt) - In other words, race is now not essentially
defined, but more of a social-historical
construction. ? strategic use of essentialism or
ethnicity. (textbook 4 298-99)
12Race Different definitions
- new racism -- involves the belief that the races
are inherently different from one another in a
cultural and behavioural sense, and problems
result when they try to live together. - Different definitions of race in different
nations e.g. race related to nationality in UK
and in Taiwan, but not in the U.S. - Subtler forms of racism containment and
appropriation.
13Race Anti-Essentialist Definition vs. Literary
Appropriation
- The problematic argument of authenticity
(TEXTBOOK 4 288) - What do you think about a white writers
pretending to be of another racial group in order
to win a literary prize? - The Education of Little Tree (by by Asa Earl
Carter under the pseudonym Forrest Carter) - What do you think about the presentation of the
aborigines in mainstream American/Taiwanese
texts? (e.g., ?????, Obasans inclusioDances with
Wolvesn of Rough Lock Bill?) (TEXTBOOK 4 296-97) -
14Race Anti-Essentialist Definition vs. Literary
Appropriation
- Different Responses
- Appropriation of Indian Mythology (Lee Maracle)
? falsehood and mythologizing. - OK if done with caution(Atwood)
- the problem of speaking position and
marketability - The issue of tokenism (speaking as,
representability) ? the dominant group
determining what is visible and marketable and
thus what gets represented. - Cross-Cultural Understanding always imperfect
(300) more later -
15Colonial Identities (1) Mimicry (textbook 5
464-)
- Orientalism The colonized fixed or simplified
as Other. - Between the colonizer and the colonized
- -- Self defined in terms of the Other the two
are thus inseparable and mutually dependent - -- Uncertainty of the colonizers
- Stereotyping as fetishism -- revealed through
their repetition, which is also a process of
"recognition and disavowal of racial/cultural/hist
orical differences" - Undermined by mimicry (which is all the same but
not quite). ? Hybrid - Two possible critiques of this view
- armchair theory, not realistic
- too general and abstract.
16Mimicry Theory Examples
- (See textbook chap 5 469)
- Ambivalence between producing a reformed,
recognizable Other and insisting on difference - Ambivalence between avowal and disavowal of
castration - e.g. Taiwanese Imitation of Madonna
- E.g. Michael Jackson
- The Man Who Would be King
17Colonial Identities Mimicry and the Subaltern
The Subaltern cannot speak (Spivak).
Différance
C center
Colonial Mimicry All the same but not quite--
Indian gentleman or Indian celebration of U.K.s
national day.
18Colonial Identities the Subaltern G. Spivak
(textbook 465)
- Spivak focuses on racial, gender and class
differences, acknowledging her position as a
third-world intellectual. - Unlike the intellectuals, the Subaltern can not
speak. The colonized who are not given the
language to speak, or whose voices are not heard,
leave no mark in official history. - e.g. Sati and a woman killing herself at a time
not proper for Sati (????). - Possible criticism the subaltern can speak and
have been expressing themselves a lot.
19Postcolonial Identities II. Language
- The Caliban legacy ? to give up using the
masters language to claim English as their own
language and change it ? englishes - For Afro-Americans, Australians and Canadians,
English is their only language.
20Postcolonial Identities II. Language (2)
--Strategies
- 1. Preserving and developing ones mother tongues
with Romanization, etc. - 2. Changing or reversing or confusing the
language hierarchy - e.g. the use of Taiwanese and Hakka in Taiwan
??? the value of Chinglish - 3. mixing languages with different strategies of
translation - (Three stages of the use of colonizers
language Adopt, Adapt, Adept) - -- e.g. My Man Bovanne -- re-naming vs. Ms.
Hazels language
21Postcolonial Identities III. Filmic/Literary
Re-Visioning Taiwans History
- Signs and Spaces of Identity
- Japanese rule
- ?????(miners and prostitutes in ???)
- ?????(14 Tanakas castrated identity)
- ???? (4, 5 Puppet Show)
- 228 White Terror Taiwanese Perspective
- ????(6 1950s )
- 1947????(? traced back to the aborigines in the
Japanese rule, and with Dutch missionaries 1652,
see here) - 3) Immigration to Taiwan -- Mainland Chinese
perspectives (e.g. soldiers/immigrants) - ?????false identities?
- ???(Happy Prince and natural landscape) air
force white terror - ?????????--1960s Taipei gangs, the influence
of American culture
22Taiwans Changing Signs of Nation Nationalism
(2)
????? ???? ????? vs. ????? --Japanese song, names and sword ??????????
1945 e.g. ???? ??
1950-60 e.g. ??????? 1960 ?????? (??????,??,????) ????????? ????
1970-87 e.g. ?????????? ????lt????gt
1987 e.g.1988 ??????? ???? ???--?????????
23Postcolonial Identities III. Re-Visioned
Taiwans History ? postmodern autoethnography
- As autoethnography (textbook chap 5 471)
- forms of self-representation by colonised others
which appropriate and engage with the traditions
of their colonizers - Ray Chow challenges the subject/object split in
the Orientalist gaze in autoethnography 'the
experience of being looked at' and the 'memory of
past objecthood' is 'the primary event in
cross-cultural representation'.
24Postcolonial Identities III. Re-Visioned
Taiwans History ? postmodern autoethnography
- Postmodern autoethnography
- -- Beyond autobiography and identity politics
Autoethnographic forms of representation address
questions of identity, ethnicity, sexuality,
gender, authenticity, elite and popular by
situating the national within a transnational
global traffic of mixed media and commodity
capitalism. - engages with the hybridity, mediation,'contaminati
on' and 'corruption' of postcolonial forms of
expression - E.g. The Woman Warrior and 1947????
25Postcolonial Identities III. Filmic/Literary
Re-Visioning Taiwans History
- 4) Examples of neo-colonialism, colonial mimicry
and third-world intellectuals positions - The American Armies in Taiwan -- ??.??(our
example)? - The Japaneselt????.??gt?lt???gt?lt???????gt? lt?????gt?
- 5) Examples of Taiwanese hybridity (next time)
26Postcolonial Identities III. Identity and
Strategies
Purity Authenticity
- Identity
- Separatism (Nativism),
- Integration, Active participation,
- Assimilation.
- Beyond identity
- Strategies
- Essentialist Construction
- Mimicry
- Re-Creation,
- Cultural Syncreticism,
- Consciously Subversive Mimicry
- Hybridization
Duality --hyphenation
Beyond Identity Politics
27Postcolonial Identities III. Hybridity
different kinds
- Hybrid identity as energizing and empowering, but
not derivative. - (Against Multiculturalism, or the idea of
authenticity and purity) - Cultural Difference with gaps and fissures in
need of constant negotiation. - Culture as a strategy of survival is both
transnational and translational. (Homi Bhabha)
28Conscious Mimicry
- Yong Soon Min Make Me, 1989
29Conscious Mimicry/Parody
- Ken Chu
- I Need some More Hair Products (1988)
30Identity Politics My Man Bonvanne
Based on the short story by Toni
- Toni Cade Bambara (1939 - 1995),
- author of The Lesson
- the narrator, Miss Hazel Peoples
- -- her language Black English
- (ebonics)
- -- her style drinks, laughs too loud and wears a
wig with - cornrows underneath (6-7)
31My Man Bonvanne
- The setting? Beginning?
- Old Folks Why does Miss Hazel dance so closely
with Bonvanne? What role does she play in her
relationship with Bovanne? (p. 3-4 "Wasn't about
tits. p. 5, 9-10) - Black Nationalists Her childrens disagreement
and Ms. Hazels response (Joe Lee p. 4, Elo pp.
5-6, and Task p. 6 ) - What does the last bathing ritual mean?
32My Man Bonvanne
- the Activists or intellectuals. vs. Grass Roots
People (pp. 3, 6) - Identity politics ? Political correctness
- 1. Focus too much on their cause and ignore a
real contact with the people they should care
about. (3) - 2. In the childrens criticism of their mother
(5-7) - -- they are fixated on their views of proper
dress, proper Black appearance and proper
things to do for the elderly, ignoring their
really needs (emotional, sexual and material). - 3. re-naming Nisi ? Tamu
- Ms. Hazel When asked to organize a council of
elders, she said Me? Didn nobody ask me nuthin.
Tamu? You mean Nisi? She change her name? (p.
6, also p. 8)
33My Man Bonvanne
- Old Folks personal connections with the narrator
- blind people got a humming jones if you notice
(3) ? Not jammin my breasts into the man. Wasn't
bout tits. Was bout vibrations. (4) - Bovanne a nice ole gent from the block
useless for the Black Nationalists - Dances with him because he is ignored by the
others offering a little Mama comfort - with Elo 7-8 I carried that child strapped to
her chest until she was nearly two (7) - Self-assertive -- How come nobody ax me (6, 8)
34My Man Bonvanne Ending
- Respect and Care for the Old Folks
- Give him a nice warm bath with jasmine leaves in
the water (9) - "Cause you gots to take care of the older folks.
... Cause old folks is the nation. That what
Nisi was saying and I mean to do my part" (9-10).
- self-confirmation
- I surely am a very pretty woman
35You have learned . . .
- A. Colonialism
- More examples of race and Racism (e.g.
Containment and Appropriation) - Colonial Types (Prospero complex and Caliban
complex) in The Tempest - Mimicry and the Subaltern
- 2. Post-Colonial Identities
- Language and Identity
- Different ways of constructing Colonial History
- Identity Construction positions
(Separatism/Nativism Active participation,
Assimilation), and strategies (Re-Creation,
Cultural Syncreticism, Mimicry) - Beyond identity politics
36We will talk more about . . .
- Colonial and Postcolonial Identities in the
contemporary world - Can the Subaltern speak? (The Piano Buddha
Bless America) - Essentialism vs. Constructionism
- Globalization Multiculturalismits different
forms.
37Reference
- Kseniya Simonovas sand drawing of Ukrainian
history during WWII. http//wesha.homeip.net/ - 1941?,???????????,
- 1944?10?,????????
- 1945?10?,????????????????????????????????
- 1991?8?24?,???????,????,?????????