39 research outputs found
La literatura comparada en el fin de siglo.
Fil: Bernheimer, Charles. Universidad de Pensilvania; Estados UnidosFil: Arac, Jonathan. Universidad de Pittsburgh; Estados UnidosFil: Hirsch, Marianne. Universidad de Columbia; Estados UnidosFil: Jones, Ann Rosalind. Universidad de Bangor; GalesFil: Judy, Ronald. Universidad de Pittsburgh; Estados UnidosFil: Krupat, Arnold. Sarah Lawrence College; Estados UnidosFil: LaCapra, Dominick. Universidad Cornell; Estados UnidosFil: Molloy, Sylvia. Universidad de París; FranciaFil: Nichols, Steve. Universidad de Utah; Estados UnidosFil: Suleri, Sara. Universidad Yale; Estados UnidosTraducción de Claudia Gilman
Writing Fathers: Auto/biography and Unfulfilled Vocation in Sara Suleri Goodyear's Boys Will be Boys
Researching ethnicity, identity, subjectivity: anything but the four lettered word
The article gives a frank account of how anthropological research on Cape Verdean migrant experiences of parenthood in Portugal developed from avoiding the use of the analytical concept of ‘race’ to encountering ‘race’ as a category of practice in a number of fieldwork settings and discusses the implications of this for analyzing the data. The aim of the research was to look beyond categorizations, to explore the emotional dimensions of lived experience. Although the data reveals how ‘racial automatisms’ constituted part of the social structure that impacted upon migrant subjectivities, it also draws attention to the nuances that may be overlooked if racist effects are mechanically conflated with racist intentions.Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologi
"Where is the time to sleep?" Orientalism and citizenship in Mahasweta Devi’s writing
This article discusses the close relationship between Bengali writer Mahasweta Devi’s literary work and her activism in support of indigenous people in India, and considers the two activities as interventions in the field of law. Devi’s emphasis on the continuity between colonial and postcolonial legal frameworks invites us to look at law as a governing discourse that stigmatized Adivasis. The criminalization of indigenous people via the Criminal Tribes Act (1871) and the presumption that they belonged to a “state of nature” form part of an orientalist bias against the tribals that was legally sustained during colonialism and also through Nehru’s discourses on the modern nation. Through analysis of the short story “Operation? – Bashai Tudu”, where law appears as a non-democratic instrument for governing the poor, and using extracts from a hitherto unpublished conversation between the author and Devi, it argues that Devi’s work can be considered as a crucial analytical tool with which to explore the genealogy of Adivasi marginalization