The Cambridge Companion to Postcolonial Literary Studies

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Neil Lazarus
Cambridge University Press, 2004 M07 15 - 301 páginas
The Cambridge Companion to Postcolonial Literary Studies, first published in 2004, offers a lucid introduction and overview of one of the most important strands in recent literary theory and cultural studies. The volume aims to introduce readers to key concepts, methods, theories, thematic concerns, and contemporary debates in the field. Drawing on a wide range of disciplines, contributors explain the impact of history, sociology and philosophy on the study of postcolonial literatures and cultures. Topics examined include everything from anti-colonial nationalism and decolonisation to globalisation, migration flows, and the 'brain drain' which constitute the past and present of 'the postcolonial condition'. The volume also pays attention to the sociological and ideological conditions surrounding the emergence of postcolonial literary studies as an academic field in the late 1970s and early 1980s. The Companion turns an authoritative, engaged and discriminating lens on postcolonial literary studies.

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Contenido

List of contributors page
ix
Introducing postcolonial studies I
1
Social and Historical Context
15
Anticolonialism national liberation and postcolonial
41
The institutionalization of postcolonial studies
66
Postcolonial literature and the Western literary canon
83
Poststructuralism and postcolonial discourse
97
postcolonial studies
120
Temporality and postcolonial critique
162
Nationalism and postcolonial studies
183
Feminism inand postcolonialism
199
Latin American postcolonial studies and global
221
Migrancy hybridity and postcolonial literary studies
241
References
262
Index
292
Derechos de autor

Reading subaltern history
139

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