PostColonialism Colonialism An Age of Empires What puts
- Slides: 44
Post-Colonialism
Colonialism An Age of Empires
What puts the “post” in Postcolonialism? �Considering “post” is a prefix meaning after, we need to first discuss the history behind colonialism. �What is colonialism? • An extension of a nations rule over territory beyond its borders • A population that is subjected to the political domination of another population
�This is the world at what is considered the height of colonialism. What do you notice?
How long did it last and why did it end? � 15 th Century to 20 th century (arguably, it is still going on). �WWII • Right to sovereignty • Lack of resources • Independence movements
� At its peak, the British Empire ruled roughly one-quarter of the earth’s land population. • Economically and culturally, British power fed off of British conquest • Yet, until the last few decades, the study of British history and literature ignored the implications of this �Westerners had a stake, however unconscious, in not owning up to colonialism and not thinking about it critically �As Americans, how often do we think about what we did to the Indians? �Erasure – Do we even acknowledge a people’s history before we got there?
Two kinds of Colonies � Settler Colonies • Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the United States • Settlers move in permanently, their descendents usually grow up more numerous than the people they’ve colonized � Occupation Colonies – Exploitation colonies or colonies of conquest • Colonial India and Nigeria • Colonist remain a small proportion of the population. • Just want the locals labor or stuff
Justification? �Social Darwinism • Eurocentrism • Universalism • Colonialism is nature �“White Man’s Burden” • What was thought to be an obligation to “civilize” non-European peoples �“Great White Father” �At one point it was even the title of Peter Pan
What is going on here?
�Following the independence of India and Pakistan in 1947, the wave of newly independent nations inspired excitement and hope across south Asia, southeast Asia, Africa and the middle east. • • Some colonies fought for independence Some got it peacefully Some set up successful democracies Some shift back and forth between elected and imposed governments
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neocolonialism �In many countries local oligarchs and dictators betrayed the promise of independence by exploiting the divisions and disarray left by colonialism • Including the concentration of capital and resources in a few privileged hands • we call this neocolonialism
Post-Colonialism
When � Developed study out of two earlier branches of • Commonwealth literature �Commonwealth - an association of self-governing autonomous states more or less loosely associated in a common allegiance (as to the British crown) • Third world studies � Became 1990’s a major theoretical force in the • Spivak’s In Other Worlds (1987) • Ashcroft’s The Empire Writes Back (1989) • Bhaba’s Nation and Narration (1990)
�That post-colonialism and multiculturalism emerged at the same time is probably not a coincidence • Your English lit textbooks (1994) are so multicultural they barely have any English lit in them. �Must have been the cultural Zeitgeist
Ok, so what is POSTcolonialism? �Postcolonial theory attempts to focus on the oppression of those who were ruled under colonization. • Factors include �Political oppression �Economic oppression �Social/ cultural oppression �Psychological oppression
Who are the oppressed? �Those who were formerly colonized. �In postcolonial theory, the word colonized can mean many things. • Literal colonization �India, Australia �More abstract “colonization” • African-Americans
How were the colonized oppressed? �Postcolonial theorists believe that the colonizers (generally Europeans): • Imposed their own values onto those colonized so that they were internalized �Examples • Social/ Cultural - Spanish language/ Catholic religion in the Caribbean • Political – Drew the boundaries of Africa based on European politics rather than tribal interests
Focus � Analyze the � postcolonial global effects of European colonialism criticism defines formerly colonized peoples as any population that has been subjected to the political domination of another population • • African Americans Aboriginal Australians the formerly colonized population of India The United States �Nineteenth century American lit was marked by an attempt to build a cannon that was not dominated by British Literature • Children? � All cultures affected by the imperial process from the moment of colonization to the present day
• A field of theory concerning itself with the fallout of colonialism and the relationship between colonizers and colonized. �How colonized people maintain or fail to maintain their cultural identity while under colonial rule �How a people reestablish or create their national after the colonizers leave
• post colonialism fills the need to seek and understand the operations – politically, socially, culturally, and psychologically – of colonialist and anti-colonialist ideologies. �The forces that pressed the colonized to internalized the colonizers values �Resistance, to understand the antagonism between colonizer and colonized �To understand the cultural colonization that remains long after the colonizers are gone �Denigration of the native culture, morals, appearance �Colonialism erases pre-colonialist history, history starts with “us” �“America” was here for thousands of years before the pilgrims got here, what was going on? �Exactly �Postcolonial nations need to rediscover their identity
Vocab Post-Colonialist
The Others and Orientalism �Other – looking at the colonized subject as essentially different from the colonizer • Almost the same but not quite • Almost the same but not white �The colonized other is never seen as equal to the colonizer �Colonizer and Colonized, white and other, is the core binary dissected by Post colonialism �Othering – The process of creating that artificial difference.
� Colonial conquests resulted in an attempt to know and administer colonial subjects which inaugurated an “othering” generating the pervasive images of effeminate Indians (from India), savage Africans, and inscrutably sinister Orientals that are common in the literature of the British empire. � Frankenstein has a diabolical turk.
Others Continued • Colonizers assumed their own superiority and the inferiority of natives �That they (the colonizers) are the embodiment of civilization �The “white man’s burden” �Technology helps to naturalize the illusion of superiority • Natives are considered other, less human �Divides world between us and them, establishing a binary white and not quite �savage typically evil �sometimes assumes a primitive beauty or nobility (the exotic other or noble savage) �Indians in TEWWG
Orientalism � � Precursor to “the other” A concept introduced by Edward Said (1978) • Attempted to explain how the European/ Western colonizers looked upon the “Orient” � What is the Orient? • A mystical place that was stereotyped due to lack of knowledge and imagination • Sensual, lazy, exotic, irrational, cruel, promiscuous, seductive, dishonest, mystical, superstitious, primitive, ruled by emotion, despotic �All people think alike, and their actions are determined by the national or racial category that they belong to � A “lumping” together of Asian cultures • Examples?
binary
� The notion of otherness has helped to build the 1 st, 2 nd, 3 rd, world hierarchy, worlding � Homi Bhabha later deconstructs this binary with his notion of hybridity which focuses on the mutual influence the cultures of the colonized and colonizers had on each other.
• The colonialist ideology was a part of established colony schools, locals were indoctrinated into the culture, made to feel almost equal but forever inferior �hegemony • The practice of othering has the unfortunate effect of making a reality of the often contrived (fake) differences it depends on
�The modern face of orientalism and othering
hybridity �Deconstructing the binary between colonizer/colonized �Colonized people and colonizers have taken on many of each others ways of living and thinking �Colonized peoples move to the lands of their colonizers
Mimicry • Mimicry, the attempt of the colonized to become the colonizer. This only reinforces notions of natural superiorly and the imposters realize they will never quite be those that they impersonate. �Desire and shame �Bhabha initially defines this as “almost the same but not white” and later problematizes this with “almost the same but not quite” �When the powerful mimic the weak, it reinforces ideas of superiority, consider black face in early 20 th century America �When the weak mimic the strong, it may demonstrate ambivalence, reinforce the colonizers assumption of their superiority, or even challenge it if the mimicry demonstrates complete enough mastery of the factors that initially provided the colonizers with their illusion of superiority
Vocab � Double Consciousness – Perceiving the world both in terms of the colonizers and the indigenous population. Leads to unstable identity. � Diaspora – multigenerational exile �Pre nation of Israel Jews �Post nation of Israel Palestinians �The former Cuban Bourgeoisie after Castro �Africans � Overcharging – emphasizing the constructedness of ethnic identity
Postcolonialists… �Examining colonizer/colonized relationships in literature • Is the work pro/ anti colonialist? Why? • Does the text reinforce or resist colonialist ideology? �Tries to introduce/ expose “otherized” works • Works by the colonized • Resisting/ Revising the canon
Postcolonialists… �Explore the dynamics of colonization through literary works • How did it come about? • How did it end? • How does the text explain this? �Looking at the “otherized” characters • Example? • Frankenstein’s “monster”
- Maritime and land based empires differences
- Signified monkey poem
- Postcolonialism
- Postcolonialism is
- Ethnicity in postcolonialism
- Iron age bronze age stone age timeline
- Iron age bronze age stone age timeline
- Land empires in the age of imperialism
- First age of empires
- Phases of colonialism
- Post colonialism in tempest
- Colonialism and development: korea, taiwan, and kwantung
- First wave of colonialism
- Postcolonial key terms
- What were the causes of imperialism
- Star trek colonialism
- Electronic colonialism theory
- First wave colonialism
- What is post colonialism
- Example of colonialism
- Colonialism thesis statement
- Colonialism vs imperialism venn diagram
- Relationship between imperialism and colonialism
- Negatives of colonialism
- Impact of neo colonialism on third world countries
- Covered put
- Together
- Definition of calls and puts
- The official nordstrom organization chart puts the
- Protective put diagram
- The official nordstrom organization chart puts the
- Who puts together land , labour and capital for production
- Rima puts the tub in the sun
- Differentiate between gets() and puts()
- Cara penggunaan puts
- Templates for introducing quotations
- Amir puts some numbers into a function machine
- Difference array and string
- Who is a person who puts together land
- Bone age greater than chronological age
- "age of trilobites" or "age of fish".
- Victorian age and modern age
- Brahmanas meaning
- Paleolithic vs neolithic
- Romantic and victorian age