23 research outputs found
âThe Writing of the Empireâ: Economies of Writing and âOthernessâ in Henri Fauconnierâs <em>Malaisie</em>
The development of colonial and postcolonial literatures usually follows a tripartite periodization: (1) a phase during which works are produced by \u27representatives\u27 of the colonial order, those able to represent this order by virtue of being white and European; (2) a succeeding phase in which texts are produced under the auspices of the colonial order by culturally incorporated natives who are bound by the hegemonies of this order as a condition of undertaking literary production; (3) this phase is then overtaken by one existing after the Second World Warâhere independent postcolonial literatures arise in which the cosmography of Western superiority is supplanted. However, there are texts produced in phase (1) that do not possess the allegedly typical features of the works belong to it. My claim resides in the possibility that such periodizations do account for a kind of \u27Western\u27 text in which the author risks being changed, as he/she submits her/himself to worlds of possibility displacing authorized notions of \u27being Western\u27, etc. Using de Certeau and Edward Said, I provide a reading of Henri Fauconnier\u27s Prix Goncourt-winning 1930 francophone novel Malaisie that develops the concept of a \u27paracoloniality\u27, where I show what tends to be overlooked in most discussions of colonial and postcolonial literatures
Mao\u27s On Contradiction, Mao-Hegel/Mao-Deleuze
Mao Tse-Tung\u27s famous 1937 essay On Contradiction is regarded as a significant attempt to redefine and reapply Marx\u27s notion of a dialectical contradiction to the Chinese revolutionary conjuncture of Mao\u27s time. I set out the principles outlined in Mao\u27s essay, before arguing that the revolutionary conjuncture of his time no longer exists in the era of globalization and neoliberalism. I conclude that a new conception of antagonism is needed, and revise Mao\u27s position with the aid of the philosophy of Deleuze and Guattari