Postcolonialism: My LivingThis collection of essays charts the author's intellectual journey as an academic teaching "postcolonial literature" in a Canadian university. Mukherjee challenges and shows the inadequacy of the postcolonial, feminist and postmodern theories that emerge from the metropolitain centres of the West. Using detailed, nuanced and informed readings of a variety of authors from India, Africa, and Canada she demontrates how in their universalizing such theories fail to take account of the specific histories, cultures, and stuggles within the so-called third-world countries as well as the non-European-immigrant and Native communities of North America. |
Contents
How Shall We Read South Asian CanadianTexts? | 24 |
The Emergence of Dalit Writing | 41 |
Facing the Interrogations of Dalit Writing | 52 |
Copyright | |
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Aboriginal according African American become begin believe called Canada Canadian literature canon caste claims colonized common considered countries course critics cultural Dalit described discourse dominant English example experience fact feel feminist gender give hand Hindu human identity important Indian interest issues kind knowledge language literary lives major male meaning minority mother nationalist nature nonwhite novel oppression particular passage political postcolonial literature postcolonial theory present Press problem produced published question race racial racism readers reality references regions represent resistance response Review Rohinton Mistry seems shared similar social society South Asian Canadian speak status story suggests taught teacher teaching tell texts theoretical theorists third world Toronto tradition understand universal untouchables voice western woman women writers written York
References to this book
Contemporary Canadian Women's Fiction: Refiguring Identities Coral Ann Howells No preview available - 2003 |