6 research outputs found
From Cairo to Tottenham: Big Societies, Neoliberal States, Colonial Utopias
While the August riots are quite readily understood as an outburst provoked by the negligence of the neoliberal state, there has been a widespread failure amongst Western commentators and politicians to understand the extent to which the Egyptian revolution should also be understood as an uprising against neoliberalism. This essay draws on cultural sources, journalism and socio-economic analyses to make the case that Mubarak’s Egypt could be understood in terms of neoliberal forms of the Big Society, especially, that of the gated community. In demonstrating the reliance of the neoliberal state on security policies based on policing, the essay goes on to analyse the riots in such terms. Even as the Egyptian revolution and the riots shared similar sources of frustration, their quite different manifestations are explained in terms of differing structures of feeling, those of dignity and pride. Finally, a postcolonial framework of analysis is brought to bear on the material considered by the essay to show the persistence of the colonial structures of neoliberal capitalism
"Same old, same old": Zadie Smith's 'White teeth' and Monica Ali's 'Brick Lane'
Close examination of White Teeth and Brick Lane illustrates why postcolonial frameworks continue to be relevant when discussing "black British literature". To differing degrees, both these novels maintain postcolonial contexts in their representation of British-born black and Asian individuals as they express the confidence of this new generation. This paper addresses how the tensions between British-born confidence and familiar tropes of migrant alienation may call into question readings of these novels that emphasize their uniqueness and positivity