, to see if you have full access to this publication.
Book Titles No access

Cartographies of Transnationalism in Postcolonial Feminisms

Geography, Culture, Identity, Politics
Authors:
Publisher:
 2012

Summary

This book proffers a new theory of the radical possibilities of contemporary postcolonial feminist writings from Africa, the Middle East, the Americas, and the Caribbean, against what can be described as “actually-existing colonialisms.” These writers include prominent and other less-known postcolonial women writers such as Tsitsi Dangarembga, Louise Erdrich, Aurora Levins Morales, Rosario Morales, Esmeralda Santiago, Raymonda Tawil, Michelle Cliff, and Rigoberta Menchú. Negotiating the contradictions among gender, nation, and globalization, postcolonial women writers construct extimate subjectivities that mark their excessive locations in the social field through the dialectical relation between the intimate and the external, the intimately or internally external, articulating these contradictions within the larger history and narratives of anti-colonial internationalist struggle for liberation and emancipation.

Grounded in a commitment to the future of the postcolonial nation and the project of decolonization and liberation within the ever-encroaching, neocolonial global capitalist system, postcolonial women’s narratives of displacing offer not only an alternative mode of ideological critique of scripted and commonly-inherited discourses of identity, home, culture that obfuscate the fundamental social antagonism, but also ways of changing them through practices of radical politics. The book thus charts four intersecting, dialogic strategies, by which postcolonial women writers produce extimate subjectivities: travel, unhomeliness, multiple and shifting subject positions, and transnational alliances. First, specific strategies of travel, voluntary and involuntary, within glocal networks of dispossession, displacement, and labor migration that foreground their extimate locations as internally external. Second, tactics of unhomeliness that uncover traces of the foreign, and elsewhere, in the edifice of the familiar that serve as the basis for interrogating dominant discourses of belonging. Third, techniques of multiple and shifting subject positions that recognize the excessive location of the extimate subject, in order to unravel not only the contingency of the subject’s ontic properties, but also her locations in the interplay of oppression and privilege. And fourth, strategies for building political solidarity with transnational and transethnic communities of struggle that are grounded in the concrete Universality of the excluded communities.

This book bears witness to the radical possibility in contemporary postcolonial feminist writing, and promises a way out of the impasse of the current culturalization of politics in the humanities that has resulted from the uncritical celebration of hybridity and the concomitant emphasis on diaspora, postnationalism, and cosmopolitanism in dominant discourses of postcolonial, ethnic, and transnational studies.

Keywords



Bibliographic data

Copyright year
2012
ISBN-Print
978-0-7391-7063-2
ISBN-Online
978-0-7391-7064-9
Publisher
Lexington, Lanham
Language
English
Pages
199
Product type
Book Titles

Table of contents

ChapterPages
    1. Contents No access
    2. Acknowledgments No access
  1. Introduction: The Poetics and Politics of Displacing No access Pages 1 - 30
  2. 1 “The Meaning of So Many Roads” No access Pages 31 - 60
  3. 2 “None of the Women Are at Home” No access Pages 61 - 90
  4. 3 “Escaping the Claustrophobia of Belonging ” No access Pages 91 - 120
  5. 4 “We Palestinians Are the Jews of the Arab World” No access Pages 121 - 152
  6. Conclusion: Did Anyone Say Revolution? No access Pages 153 - 174
  7. Bibliography No access Pages 175 - 188
  8. Index No access Pages 189 - 198
  9. About the Author No access Pages 199 - 199

Similar publications

from the topics "Linguistics"
Cover of book: Lessing Yearbook/Jahrbuch LII, 2025
Edited Book No access
Carl Niekerk, Thomas Martinec
Lessing Yearbook/Jahrbuch LII, 2025
Cover of book: Postcolonial Studies
Educational Book No access
Dirk Uffelmann, Paweł Zajas
Postcolonial Studies
Cover of book: Sprache – Rhythmus – Übersetzen
Edited Book No access
Marco Agnetta, Vera Viehöver, Nathalie Mälzer
Sprache – Rhythmus – Übersetzen
Cover of book: Linguistik im Nordwesten
Edited Book Full access
Katharina S. Schuhmann, Tio Rohloff, Thomas Stolz
Linguistik im Nordwesten