IR2501 – week 8 lectures II – Postcolonial Studies.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Study of Conflict in Political Science and International Relations
Advertisements

IR2501 Theories of International Relations
IR3001 Alternative Approaches to Security (I) Lecture Plan: The historical context of definitions of security Widening the notion of security Structural.
IR2501 – week 6 lectures I - Edward Saids critique of Orientalism Claire Heristchi F43 EWB Consultation Times: Tuesdays 10-noon
“The Clash of Civilizations”
Money, Sex and Power Gendered power and the development of colonialism Week
General Introduction to Postcolonialism
MDAW 2013: DCH & MBK.  Realism  Idealism  Liberalism  Marxism  Critical Theory(s)
International Relations Theory
Anthropology and Sociology of Development
Postcolonial Theory Feminist Theory. CRITICAL THEORY an interdisciplinary social theory oriented toward critiquing and changing society as a whole, in.
Internationalising the Curriculum: A Departmental Approach Nasos Roussias Department of Politics Presentation prepared for “Internationalisation of Learning.
Unit Five: Contemporary Approaches - Feminism and Constructivism
CRITICAL PARADIGMS OF SOCIAL RESEARCH
Marxist theories of International relations
US 2232 Critical development theory and practice (Second half of spring semester)
Multiculturalism and diaspora culture The renewed interest in debates on Third Cinema: from decolonialization to globalization. Erosion of the binary logic.
Orientalism Edward W. Said Knowledge Structures 17:610:580 Professor Marija Dalbello.
By Patrick Bongo Student No MA in International Relations Staffordshire University.
1 Principles for Social Transformation Research Stephen Castles Social transformation studies: n The analysis of transnational connectedness n Effects.
Historical Development of Cultural Geography Stephen McFarland.
E THNIC AND P OST -C OLONIAL S TUDIES. Authors in previous study blocks have critiqued stable, fixed notions of identity, identity as a state, preferring.
Sociology of Gender GenderThrough the Prism of Difference Chapter One: Part two Theorizing Difference from Multiracial Feminism.
Introduction to the Term Postcolonialism Chapter One.
REMINDER: FINAL EXAM DATE/TIME/ROOM SECTION 9: MONDAY AUGUST 10 TH, 1:30PM (GET HERE EARLY) RM 314 SECTION 15: THURSDAY APRIL 13 TH, 1:30PM (GET HERE EARLY)
 A Postcolonialist Analysis of the Development Cooperation between the EU and the ACP Countries Bohao Wang M.A. in Political Science National Taiwan University.
 Subaltern refers to persons socially, politically, and geographically outside of the hegemonic power structure.  Subalterns are groups who have had.
Postcolonialism. The field of Postcolonialism has been gaining prominence since the 1970s. Edward Said’s Orientalism The sheer extent and duration of.
Overview Definition of Terms Postcolonial Feminist Theories Chandra Mohanty.
Catherine Hall  Histories, Empires and the Post- Colonial Moment.
Overview Mohanty continued Spivak Narayan. Gayatri Spivak-Terms Strategic essentialism- no essence based on biology or culture, but can be employed for.
MA “International Relations, Global Economy and Strategic Analysis” COURSE OUTLINE.
Post-Colonialism From political to cultural independence.
Loomba – The End Post-Modernism and Postcolonial Studies Conclusion.
The Great Debates in International Relations 1 st Great Debate (20s & 30s) 2 nd Great Debate (50s-80s) 3 rd Great Debate (80s & on)
FEMINISM 14 JUNE 2010.
Colonialism’s epilogue Liv Magnien The effects of a nation being invaded and colonized.
A Critical Postmodern Approach to Education 1. Constructed by: Brady Gallego Master’s Candidate California State University, San Bernardino 2.
Area Studies Controversy ID01302 Kih, Hee-Seong. Questions Who are Social Scientists? And who are Area Specialists?
TEXT & MEANING Postcolonial Theory. Postcolonial Theory –What it is Focuses on the reading and writing of literature written in previously or currently.
Postcolonialism By Antolin Bonnett and Olivia Rushin.
P OSTCOLONIAL E PISTEMOLOGIES Gurminder K Bhambra Wednesday 6 th November, 2013.
Ranajit Guha and Subaltern Studies Broad movements/shifts in historical studies after WW2 Intellectual currents: from Marxism to structuralism,
POSTCOLONIALISM.  Post-colonialism is an intellectual direction that exists since around the middle of the 20 th century.  It developed from and mainly.
Colonialism. What is colonialism/imperialism? Waylen distinguishes ‘old’ and ‘new’ forms of colonialism Old colonialism – late 15 th and 16 th centuries.
Postcolonialism.
Ranajit Guha and Subaltern Studies
CHAPTER 12 This chapter introduces students to the history and effects of colonialism, especially on the part of the British and French. The chapter also.
Popular Movements in Asia and the Promise of Triangularity
Lecture #2 Alternative Theoretical Perspectives: Constructivism, Marxism, Feminist Theory.
GayatrI Chakravorty SpIvak
Cultural Imperialism (1): Theories
Kay Chapman Plymouth Institute of Education
Critical Approaches to Communication Theory
The Post Colonial Critic (1990s-present)
Introduction to Global Politics
POSTCOLONIAL CRITICISM
What do you think this is a map of?
POSTCOLONIAL CRITICISM
One:The rise of post-colonialism
Lecture Code: PS_L.3 MA English Semester ii (Fall 2018) Postcolonial Studies – Definitions, Issues & Theorists Min Pun, PhD, Associate Professor Dept.
POSTCOLONIAL CRITICISM
Postcolonial Criticism
Post-colonial Literature
Security Theory And Peak Oil Theory.
Postcolonial Histories
Introduction to Global Politics
Colonial and Capitalistic Perspectives of Gender
Presentation transcript:

IR2501 – week 8 lectures II – Postcolonial Studies

Postcolonial Studies Inter-disciplinary field of study involving all humanities, arts and social sciences Especially prominent in literary and cultural studies, but recent impact on IR Aim: to analyse the postcolonial condition Questions that transition to independence is smooth, or unproblematic Initial questions: What is the long term legacy of the Imperial era (political, cultural, economic…)? How meaningful is independence? Who writes the history of colonialism? – have the victors created a fantasy of a positive impact rather than oppression and exploitation?

Founding Parents Edward Said Power-knowledge nexus of Imperialism deconstructive critique of techniques of Othering Gayatri Spivak Subjectivity of subaltern subjects Debates on the representation of marginalised voices in social research Homi Bhabha conceptions of the nation Hybrid identities Ranajit Guha and the Subaltern Studies Group Rewriting history from the perspective of the colonised Decentering the production of academic knowledge

Intellectual agendas in Postcolonial Studies How can we re-write history to account for the perspective of native populations? What would be the impact on contemporary analyses and categories? How can we have a non-oppressive academic discourse? Can the Subaltern Speak? Does Western scholarship have the tools of speak of other cultures? Debates on universalism in values Why are the concerns and views of Western scholars and policy-makers taken more seriously than those of thinkers from the margins? Agenda-setting by the powerful that excludes voices and indigenous concerns of most of the world

Challenges and Debates Main debate in postcolonial theory: Neo-Marxist vs. post-structuralist emphases Over-stating the discursive aspects hides the material components of neo-imperialism? i.e. too stuck with talking about texts? Importance of discussing increasingly subtle mechanisms for surveillance, control and exploitation should not be dismissed: discursive masks of colonialism change over time… Resilience of Orientalism as a mechanism for Othering E.g. civilising mission of the War on Terror? Risk of over-emphasising colonialism as a marker: p/c states vary, and elites should take share of the blame for ease of their own corruption

Implications for International Relations Seemingly very focused micro-theory, but the implications are fundamental to IR: Theorisation of power, in terms of Empire, relating to the material and discursive aspects of power Fundamentally challenges: Realist Foreign policy and the international system as a rational, predictable setting…IR is full of cultural assumptions and lacks objectivity E.g. racist US assumptions about Japan shaping WWII policy and academic discourses on the developing world Categories chosen and linear, Western-centric, scale of development set out ill-suited goals which postcolonial societies cannot but fail to reach Assuming a level playing field of globalisation that hides growing inequalities steeped in a long history, and structurally reinforced Hides ideological underpinnings of good governance discourse

Can there be an IR without Othering? Connection to wider post-structuralist agendas: is exclusion a feature of identity? David Campbell: the state defines its identity through perceived enemies… Greater regional cooperation maintains boundaries – e.g. EU: even common identities need an outside Connection to wider neo-Gramscian thought and World Systems Theory/Dependencia School Is the developed world developed precisely because the developing world isnt? Discourse of the liberal growth (through free trade) and the liberal peace (through intervention) imply that everyone is can be a winner in IR… Is this structurally possible?

Conclusions Does Orientalism apply to analyses of the contemporary Middle East? Does it apply to other parts of the Global South? What lies behind dominant discourses in IR, and IR theory? Is IR theory fundamentally Western-centric? Does it put a veneer of legitimacy and rationality on exclusion and exploitation? What opportunities are there for marginalised sections of populations, cultures or parts of the world to speak for themselves... and to be heard?