punctum books
Fuck Postcolonialism
- Erin Maglaque (author)
Chapter of: Burn after Reading: Vol. 1, Miniature Manifestos for a Post/medieval Studies + Vol. 2, The Future We Want: A Collaboration(pp. 79–83)
Export Metadata
- ONIX 3.0
- ThothCannot generate record: No publications supplied
- Project MUSECannot generate record: No BIC or BISAC subject code
- OAPENCannot generate record: Missing PDF URL
- JSTORCannot generate record: No BISAC subject code
- Google BooksCannot generate record: No BIC, BISAC or LCC subject code
- OverDriveCannot generate record: No priced EPUB or PDF URL
- Thoth
- ONIX 2.1
- EBSCO HostCannot generate record: No PDF or EPUB URL
- ProQuest EbraryCannot generate record: No PDF or EPUB URL
- EBSCO Host
- CSV
- JSON
- OCLC KBART
- BibTeX
- CrossRef DOI depositCannot generate record: This work does not have any ISBNs
- MARC 21 RecordCannot generate record: MARC records are not available for chapters
- MARC 21 MarkupCannot generate record: MARC records are not available for chapters
- MARC 21 XMLCannot generate record: MARC records are not available for chapters
Title | Fuck Postcolonialism |
---|---|
Contributor | Erin Maglaque (author) |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.21983/P3.0067.1.17 |
Landing page | https://punctumbooks.com/titles/burn-after-reading/ |
License | https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/ |
Copyright | Maglaque, Erin |
Publisher | punctum books |
Published on | 2014-04-28 |
Long abstract | Since the late 1990s, a group of medieval literary scholars and historians have drawn upon postcolonial theory, a discipline which itself emerged, in its most coherent and resilient form, from the Subaltern Studies group fifteen years before.1 Medievalists’ work with postcolonial theo-ry can be roughly divided into two kinds of engagement: first is the group of scholars interested in applying post-colonial theories to their medieval sources, and who are, in the tradition of Said’s Orientalism, interested in the representative work of the racial or ethnic other in the medieval text. A second and perhaps more disparate group is interested in the disciplinary and political impli-cations of medievalism and postcolonialism, their inter-twined intellectual histories, and especially the ways in which studying the interrelation between postcolonial and medieval historiographies can lead to a reconsidera-tion of periodization and temporalities. |
Page range | pp. 79–83 |
Print length | 5 pages |
Language | English (Original) |
Contributors