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Title: The Indivisible Globe, the Indissoluble Nation
Sub-title: Universality, Postcoloniality, and Nationalism in the Age of Globalization
By (author): Li-Chun Hsiao
ISBN10-13: 3838215249 : 9783838215242
Format: Paperback
Size: 210x150mm
Pages: 178
Weight: .233 Kg.
Published: ibidem - April   2021
List Price: 31.00 Pounds Sterling
Availability: In Stock   Qty Available: 1
Subjects: Globalization
Li-Chun Hsiao attempts to rethink, under the rubric of globalization, several key notions in postcolonial theory and writings by revisiting what he conceives as â the primal scene of postcolonialityâ â the Haitian Revolution. He unpacks and critiques the post-structuralist penchants and undercurrents of the postcolonial paradigm in First-World academia while not reinstating earlier Marxist stricture. Focusing on Edouard Glissantâ s, C. L. R. Jamesâ s, and Derek Walcottâ s representations of Toussaint Lâ Ouverture and the Haitian Revolution, the textual analyses approach the issues of colonial mimicry, postcolonial nationalism, and postcoloniality in light of recent reconsiderations of the universal and the particular in critical theories, and psychoanalytic conceptions of trauma, identity, and jouissance. Hsiao argues that postcolonial intellectualsâ characteristic celebration of the Particular, together with their nuanced denunciation of the postcolonial nation and the Revolution, doesnâ t really do away with the category of the Universal, nor twist free of the problematic of the logics of difference/equivalence that sustains the â living onâ of the nation-state, despite an ever expanding globality; rather, such a postcolonial phenomenon is symptomatic of a disavowed traumatic event that mirrors and prefigures the predicament of the postcolonial experience while invoking its simulacra and further struggles centuries later.
Table of Contents:
Abstract; Introduction; The Postcolonial Paradigm/Paradox: Theorizing between the Universal and the Particular; Toussaint, Mimicry, and the Primal Scene of Postcoloniality; In the Name of the Father: Representing Postcolonial Nationalisms; Toussaint, Globalization, and the Postcolonial Spectacle; Epilogue; About the Author; Bibliography.
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