Postcolonial studies:
Postcolonial refers to a historical phase undergone by
third world countries after the decline of colonialism: for example, when
countries in Asia, Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean separated from the
European empires and were left to rebuild themselves. Many third world writers focus
on both colonialism and the changes created in a postcolonial culture. Among
the many challenges facing postcolonial writers are the attempts both to
resurrect their culture and to combat the pre-conceptions about their culture.
At first glance postcolonial studies would seem to be
matter of history and political science, rather than literary criticism.
However, we must remember that English, as in “English Department” or “English
literature”, has been since the age of the British Empire a global language.
Britain seemed to foster in its political institution as well as in literature universal
ideals for proper living, while at the same time perpetuating the violent enslavement
of Africans and other imperialist cruelties around the World, causing untold
misery and destroying millions of lives. Postcolonial literary theorist study
the English language within this politicized context especially those writings
that developed at the colonial “front”, such as work by Rudyard Kipling ,
E.M.Foster ,Jean Rhys, or Jamaica Kincaid. Earlier figures such as the Empire
Writes Back, edited by Bill Ashcroft and other, and The Black Atlantic by Paul
Gilroy have radically remapped cultural criticism.
Said’s concept of orientalism was an
important touchstone to postcolonial studies, as he described the stereotypical
discourse about the east as constructed by the west. this discourse rather than
realistically portraying eastern “others”
constructs them based upon western anxieties and preoccupation Said sharply
critiques the western image of the oriental as
“irrational,depraved,child-like’different.which has allowed the west to define
itself as” rational, virtuous, mature, normal; To describe the Us-and-Them
binary social relation with which Western Europe intellectually divided the
world into “Occident” and “Orient”, the cultural critic Edward W. Said
developed the denotations and connotations of the term Orientalism. That the
cultural representations generated with the Us-and-Them binary relation are
social constructs, which are mutually constitutive and cannot exist independent
of each other, because each exists on account of and for the other. Notably,
“The West” created the cultural concept of “The East”, which allowed the
European suppression of the ability of the peoples of the Middle East, of the
Indian Subcontinent, and of Asia, to express and represent themselves as discrete
peoples and cultures. Orientalism thus conflated and reduced the non–Western
world into the homogeneous cultural entity known as “The East”. Therefore, in
service to the colonial type of imperialism, the Us-and-Them Orientalist
paradigm allowed Europeans scholars to misrepresent the Oriental World as
inferior and backward, irrational and wild, whilst misrepresenting Western
Europe as superior and progressive, as rational and civil, as the opposite of
the Oriental Other. In a review of Saïd's Orientalism, A. Madhavan asserts that
"Saïd's passionate thesis in that book, now an 'almost canonical study',
represented Orientalism as a 'style of thought' based on the antinomy of East
and West in their world-views and also as a 'corporate institution for dealing
with the Orient."
Frantz Fanon, a French Caribbean Marxist, drew upon his own horrific
experiences in French Algeria to deconstruct emerging national retimes that are
based on inheritances from the imperial power, warning that class ,no race is a
greater factor in worldwide oppression, and that if new nations are built in
the molds of their former oppressors, then they will perpetuate the bourgeois
inequalities from the past. his book the wretched of the Earth(1961) has been
an impart ant inspiration for postcolonial cultural critics and literary
critics who seek to understand the decolonizing project of third world writers,
especially those interested in African and African American texts.
Homi k Bhabha’s postcolonial theory involves analysis of nationality, ethnicity and politics with poststructuralist
ideas of identity and indeterminacy, defining postcolonial identities as
shifting, hybrid constructions. Bhabha critiques the presumed dichotomies
between center and periphery, colonized and colonizer, self and other borrowing
from deconstruction the argument that these are false binaries. He proposes instead a dialogic model of
nationalities , ethnicities and identities characterized by what he calls
hybridity that is they are some thing new, emerging from a ”Third space” to
interrogate the givens of the past. perhaps his most important contribution has
been to stress that because it involves an interaction between colonizer and
colonized. The old distinction between
“industrialized” and “developing” nations does not hold true today, when so
many industrial jobs have been moved overseas from countries like the united
state to countries like India and the Philippines.
Homi Bhabha, as a postcolonialist, tries to deal with the in-between
categories of cultural differences across race, class, gender and, cultural
traditions. Bhabha believes there is always ambivalence at the site of colonial
dominance. This means, "in reality any simple binary opposition
between 'colonizers' and 'colonised' or between races is undercut by the fact
that there are enormous cultural and racial differences within each of these
categories as well as cross- overs". The terms hybridity and
ambivalence are used by Bhabha to explain "the fuzziness and ambiguity of"
the construction of an Other. Indigenous peoples are thrust into
identities formed through the dominant culture's political and social
ideals. Indigenous people are slaves to their indifference which is
created in language. The vast number of indigenous cultural groups is
herded into generic constructions of identity. They share certain
constructs but at the same time differ in ways which language is incapable or
unwilling to recognize. The indigenous groups are invited into the
dominant culture but never become completely immersed into it resulting in the
sustaining of authority by the colonizer.
"Postcolonial criticism bears
witness to the unequal and uneven forces of cultural representation involved in
the contest for political and social authority within the modern world
order" Bhabha believes language creates an internal dissonance
through a naturalized reflection of performative cultural articulation.
The method by which the dominant group maintains a Euro-centric sphere of authority
is through the manipulation of language. Bhabha states, through language
"resistance is a condition produced by the dominant discourse itself...
colonial discourse is not all powerful. Identity is always in constant
flux making no unified self. The split hybrid colonial subject can exist
anywhere in the colonial world. He is undifferentiated by gender, class
or location". Without the other there is no authority, so through
hybridization an Other is formed which the Euro-centric world may rule over.
The indigenous other can not escape the boundaries of colonial discourse.
Postcolonialists believe, "skin colour has become the privileged marker of
races which are thought of either 'black' or 'white' but never big-eared' and
'small-eared'. The fact that only certain physical characteristics are
signified to define 'races' in specific circumstances indicates that we are
investigating not a given, natural division of the world's population, but the
application of historically and culturally specific meanings.
Postcolonial
critics accordingly study diasporic texts outside the usual western genres,
especially productions by aboriginal authors, marginalized ethnicities,
immigrants and refugees. Postcolonial literatures from emerging nations by such
writers as Chinua Achebe and Salman Rushdie are read alongside European
responses to colonialism by writers such as George Orwell and Albert campus. We
can see some powerful conflict arising from the colonial past in Rushdie’s midnight’s
children (1980), for example, which deconstructc from a postcolonial view point
the history of modern India.
Among the
most important figures in postcolonial feminism is Gayatri chakravorty spivak,
who examines the effects of political independence upon “subaltern” or sub
proletarian woman in the third world- spivak’s subaltern studies reveal between
the male- dominated west and the subaltern woman’s voice to rise up amidst the
global social institutions that oppress her.
Spivak also
introduced the terms essentialism and strategic essentialism to describe the social functions of
post-colonialism. The term essentialism denotes the perceptual dangers
inherent to reviving subaltern voices in ways that might simplify the cultural
identity of heterogeneous social groups, and, thereby, create stereotyped
representations of the different identities of the people who compose a given
social group. The term strategic essentialism denotes a temporary, essential
group-identity used in the praxis of discourse among peoples. Furthermore,
essentialism can occasionally be applied — by the so-described people — to
facilitate the subaltern’s communication in being heeded, heard, and
understood, because a strategic essentialism
is more readily grasped, and accepted, by the popular majority, in the
course of inter-group discourse. The important distinction, between the terms,
is that strategic essentialism does not ignore the diversity of identity and
ethnicsentialism temporarily minimizes inter-group diversity to pragmatically
support the essential group-identity.
Spivak
developed and applied Michel
Foucault’s term epistemic violence to describe the destruction of
non–Western ways of perceiving the world, and the resultant dominance of the
Western ways of perceiving the world. Conceptually, epistemic violence
specifically relates to women, whereby the “Subaltern must always be caught in
translation, never truly expressing herself”, because the colonial power’s
destruction of her culture pushed to the social margins her non–Western ways of
perceiving, understanding, and knowing the world.
As noted in
the previous section, globalization has a sustained engagement with and
Influence on local cultures. Some critics have argued that we need to address
the role Of globalization through the postcolonial lens. Since postcolonial
studies is concerned, as the chapter on theories explores, the oppression of
non-European races by European ones, Cultural Studies in a globalization age
also needs to be conscious of the radicalized nature of globalized/globalizing
culture. That is, the theme of race and u equal relations has to be worked into
any analysis of global cultures. For instance, we need to ask how Hollywood
films circulate globally. Does the fact that audiences maker? How does a
Hollywood film appear to poorer nations in these areas of the world? Think of
films like Romancing the Stone, Indiana Jones and Blood Diamond which explore
other cultures how are these conceived by Americans and received by other parts
of the world?
What this
means is: culture is increasingly mediated by economic factors. Culture has
increasingly little to do with traditions or territories. Global economic and
media flows determine what aspects of culture are across the world are
determined less by local conditions and values than a circulation of global
fashion patterns. In India, for instance, in the heavily mediated cultural
context of the present, the elite/wealthy members of society can have access to
Yves St. Laurent or a Chanel line because these are now available. Cultures and
traditions are therefore modified not with the local culture in mind but with
global patterns. Their choices are determined by the global economy.
Local
cultures are linked to global economies, markets and needs, and hence any study
of contemporary culture hat to examine the role of a non-local
market/money-which requires a postcolonial awareness of the role of racial
difference, the colonial relationship between ‘First World’ and ‘Third World’
and the exploitative relationship between the two worlds even today.
What does
such a link between postcolonial studies/theory mean for cultural Studies in a
globalizing age? This approach makes us
ask certain question:
Are local
cultural products in any way determined by the possibility of a global market?
Are such
cultural products financed by non-local moneys?
How are you
such products, rooted in local traditions circulated and marketed globally?
Even though
globalization products ‘hybrid’ products and cultural values, the question of
economic gain must underwrite our analysis of even these products. Thus wee
need to keep in mind that global material goods and products are manufactured
in south and south East Asian sweatshops –where employees that are both global
and local, and generate profits for ‘First World’ companies. This analysis
therefore is firmly rooted in a postcolonial prespecti.Local cultural artifacts
are now ‘produced’ keeping a global market in mind. This ‘production’ of local
culture is often engaged in a relationship with the first world. The
relationship between local cultural is exploited or eroticized by the First
World.
As a field
of inquiry, post colonialism asks both how unequal relationships of political
power are represented in cultural institutions such as literature, art, popular
media, and the academy and how these representations work to create,
destabilize, or understand the differences between individuals and among social
groups. Its critical theories endeavor to come to terms with the legacy of the
modern era's racism, primitivism, territorial conquest, sexual exploitation,
slavery, and mass violence, as well as the influence of that legacy on the
contemporary world.
Hi,
ReplyDeleteyou described good information about 'cultural studies' and whole some good contributors in it like Franz canon,spivak Homi Bhabha etc...
Thank you.
hi...
ReplyDeleteit is too long but you put good information... it is usefull consept by Said's East-West...
it will better if you would put a topics or steps...
thank you...
Hello Pratipalbhai
ReplyDeleteYour assignment is very long but very knowledgeable for me and you describe very well. I dont know about the postcolonial studies so, thanks for share with us
Thank You.