170 research outputs found
Postcoloniality and History
This essay explores the implications of postcolonial writing for our understanding of the practice of history. It outlines the central principles of contemporary postcolonial inquiry, and provides a critique of recent trends in the field. With its pre-occupation with the local and the particular, contemporary postcolonial writing has become detached from the critical frameworks of analysis embodied in the initial phase of postcolonial writing.Quels impacts les Ă©crits postcoloniaux ont-ils eu sur notre comprĂ©hension de la pratique de lâhistoire ? Arif Dirlik avance ici une rĂ©ponse en montrant sur quels principes fondamentaux repose la recherche contemporaine postcoloniale et en prĂ©sentant une Ă©tude critique des derniĂšres tendances dans le domaine. Parce quâils ont centrĂ© leur intĂ©rĂȘt sur le rĂ©gional et le particulier, les Ă©crits contemporains postcoloniaux se sont Ă©cartĂ©s des cadres dâanalyse critique qui avaient marquĂ© les dĂ©buts de lâĂ©criture postcoloniale
Colonialism, Revolution, Development : A Historical Perspective on Citizenship in Political Struggles in Eastern Asia
Intensified blending of populations through migrations, and the problem of citizenship in different national contexts, in recent years have foregrounded questions of culture and cultural difference in citizenship studies. These questions have been compounded by a pervasive supicion of a universalistic understanding of citizenship for its possible Eurocentric implications. Citizenship studies in Eastern Asia partake of this general problematic of culture. The complication of citizenship through recognition of its cultural dimension is a salutary development, but one that also presents a new predicament: loss of coherence of the concept, as well as a bias to culturalism that disguises the radical challenge the idea of citizenship has presented to inherited notions of political belonging, most importantly, the remaking of subjects into citizens that has accompanied the globalization of the nation-form from the late 19th century. Struggles for citizenship also bear upon questions of democracy and human rights, which also disappear from sight in culturalist readings. This is the problem that is addressed in the essay. I argue that the preoccupation with culture, if unchecked, threatens to erase a century long history of struggles for citizenship, democracy and human rights in Eastern Asian societies. Discussions of citizenship need to be sensitive to these struggles which are still very much issues of Eastern Asian politics
: Zwischen Welten Denken: Diskussionsrehe - Arif Dirlik in GesprÀch mit Gregory Lee
Gregory Lee "Initial Remarks", in part amended by hand 5 June 2001. Amendments added to the original document 28 August 2019.International audienceSee PDF document in German at https://gregorybarrylee.weebly.com/uploads/1/1/4/7/11477410/berlin_lee_dirlik.pd
The Mouse That Roared: The Democratic Movement in Hong Kong
The popular uprising in recent years in Hong Kong â âOccupy Centralâ a.k.a. Umbrella Movement â has again brought to the fore the question of the Special Administrative Regionâs relationship with Mainland China post-1997 âhandoverâ of the territory by the British colonial government to the Peopleâs Republic of China. This article argues that the protests have their origins in a consciousness born of the anxieties provoked by the prospect of unification in the 1980s and 1990s, further evolved against the background of the unstable âone country, two systemsâ arrangement openly favoring the corporate and financial ruling class in Hong Kong which is in turn prepared to align its interests with those of the Communist regime in a mutually beneficial relationship. It also posits while the upheaval in Hong Kong bears similarities to other âOccupyâ movements elsewhere in the economic issues that inform it, it may be viewed as the latest chapter in a narrative that goes back to the 1980s â the emergence of a neoliberal global capitalism of which the PRC has been an integral component, and the Tiananmen movement which was one of the earliest expressions of the social and political strains created by shifts in the global economy
Theory, History, Culture: Cultural Identity and the Politics of Theory in Twentieth-Century China
This essay inquires into the relationship between theory, culture and history as it appears from a perspective at the end of the twentieth century. The substance of the essay consists of analyses two attempts to sinicize theory: the Maoist effort of the Yan an Period to make Marxism Chinese, and an effort by Chinese sociologists in the early eighties to make sociology Chinese. On this basis, the essay argues that the effort to confront theory by culture is by no means transparent, but has different meanings at different times. Such efforts may produce new theories, but any such production is likely to be quite ambivalent in its confrontation with culture, such changes are likely to qualify received theory but preserve it as the foundation for its modifications. Secondly, where culture acquires a strong voice in theory, the result is likely to be the disintegration of theory rather than its enrichment, or the broadening of its scope. This would seem to be the situation at the end of the century as evidence accumulates of the disintegration of received theories, which is articulated in postmodern/postcolonial
questionings not only of theory and culture but of history as well. An idea such as the sinicization of theory may no longer be relevant, the essay suggests, both because it is increasingly difficult to speak of a "Chinese" culture in the face of a proliferation of Chinese societies with different historical trajectories, but also because such an idea is parochial in ignoring other cultural traditions making their claims on theory. History itself has been challenged in recent years as a particularly modern Western way of knowing the past. The essay concludes nevertheless that there is much to be gained from viewing theory, culture, and the interactions between the two, historically
Louise Edwards, Gender, Politics, and Democracy: Womenâs Suffrage in China
Gender, Politics, and Democracy offers an account of Chinese women's struggles for political suffrage from around the turn of the twentieth century to the eve of the Communist victory in 1949. Edwards argues that the term âcanzheng,â suggesting political participation in general, was understood by female political activists in the first half of the twentieth century in the more concrete sense of âsuffrage,â âcentring on the twin rights to vote and to stand for election associated with the ful..
- âŠ