Cultural theory has often been criticized for covert Eurocentric and universalist tendencies. Its concepts and ideas are implicitly applicable to everyone, ironing over any individuality or cultural difference. Postcolonial theory has challenged these limitations of cultural theory, and Postcolonial Theory and Autobiography addresses the central challenge posed by its autobiographical turn. Despite the fact that autobiography is frequently dismissed for its Western, masculine bias, David Huddart argues for its continued relevance as a central explanatory category in understanding postcolonial theory and its relation to subjectivity. Focusing on the influence of post-structuralist theory on postcolonial theory and vice versa, this study suggests that autobiography constitutes a general philosophical resistance to universal concepts and theories. Offering a fresh perspective on familiar critical figures like Edward W. Said and Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, by putting them in the context of readings of the work of Jacques Derrida, Gilles Deleuze, and Alain Badiou, this book relates the theory of autobiography to expressions of new universalisms that, together with postcolonial theory, rethink and extend norms of experience, investigation, and knowledge.
This book is centred around the recounting and analysis of such a phenomenon. Literary purists often reject autobiography as a fully-fledged literary genre, perceiving it rather as a mere life report or a descriptive diary.
The work of Tunisian Jewish intellectual Albert Memmi, like that of many francophone Maghrebian writers, is often read as thinly veiled autobiography.
This book will be of interest to students of Francophone literature, colonialism, and African history and culture.
“ Memoro - politics , ” which he triangulates with Michel Foucault's two poles of anatomo- and bio - politics - the politics of the human body and the politics of the human population - is “ a politics of the ...
Original and provocative, this book brings together the two distinct fields of Postcolonial Studies and Auto/biography Studies in a fruitful and much needed dialogue.
This book examines a cross-section of postcolonial Francophone writing from Africa and the Caribbean to highlight and compare their transnational reception.
Life in Mexico , During a Residence of Two Years in That Country . 1843 . London : Dent , 1970 . Callisher , Hortense . ... Through the Flower : My Struggle as a Woman Artist . ... Charlottetown : Gynergy Books , 1996 . Danica , Elly .
Examples include Thomas Castelli's 'Prospero in Africa: The Tempest as a colonialist text and pretext' and Karen Newman's ' “And wash the Ethiop white”: femininity and the monstrous in Othello' (both in Howard and O'Connor 1988: 99–115, ...
... translated by Quintin Hoare, 1984; as War Diaries: Notebooks from a Phoney War, translated by Hoare, 1984 Lettres ... as Witness to My Life: The Letters ofJean-Paul Sartre to Simone de Beauvoir 1926–1939 and Quiet Moments in a War: ...
Focusing on a series of major works, from Conrad's Heart of Darkness to Djebar's autobiography, via Camus's The Outsider and Fanon's polemics, the book draws on and elucidates a wide range of theoretical and critical work.