* Preface *1. Philosophy *2. Literature *3. History *4. Culture * Appendix: The Setting to Work of Deconstruction * Index
A founder of postcolonial studies surveys the current state of the field and finds much to criticize. This is vintage Spivak--dazzling, often exasperating, but unfailingly powerful. -- Partha Chatterjee, author of The Nation and Its Fragments In these pages Gayatri Spivak performs what often seems either impossible or purely gestural--a critique of transnational globalization which manages to be equally attuned to its cultural and economic effects. This book deserves to be read for its modulated defense of Marxism and feminism alone. It will be welcomed as the clearest statement to date of Spivak's own relationship to the postcolonial theory with which she herself--wrongly, as she forcefully argues here--is so often identified. With a brilliance that is uniquely hers, Spivak issues a challenge which will be very hard to avoid to the limits of theory and of academic institutions alike. -- Jacqueline Rose, author of States of Fantasy Gayatri Spivak tells us that here she charts her progress from colonial discourse studies to transnational cutlural studies. She does so brilliantly. And she does so much more. She constructs this extraordinary progress through an intricate labyrinth, but one with blazing lights in every corner. -- Saskia Sassen, author of Globalization and its Discontents Gayatri Spivak works with remarkable complexity and skill to evoke the local details of emergent agency in an international frame. Her extraordinary attention to the texts she reads and her ability to track the reach of global power make her one of the unparalleled intellectuals of our time. -- Judith Butler, author of The Psychic Life of Power
Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak is University Professor at Columbia University and a trainer of elementary school teachers in West Bengal.
Gayatri Spivak’s most recent text, A Critique of Postcolonial
Reason, brings together in a single volume a wide range of her work
in postcolonial studies… She weaves together these multiple levels
of critique brilliantly, presenting a rigorous reading of the
discourses of imperialism… A Critique of Postcolonial Reason
presents a scrupulous discussion of imperialism in European
philosophy, literature, history, and culture.
*American Studies International*
Gayatri Spivak’s long-awaited book…sets out to challenge the very
fields Spivak has herself been most associated with—postcolonial
studies and third world feminism… [A Critique of Postcolonial
Reason] is remarkable for the warnings it provides—powerful
critiques of diverse positions structure the author’s stance—as
guardian in the margin. Spivak forcefully interrogates the
practices, politics and subterfuges of intellectual formations
ranging from nativism, elite poststructuralist theory, metropolitan
feminism, cultural Marxism, global hybridism, and ‘white boys
talking postcoloniality.’
*New Formations*
A Critique of Postcolonial Reason is almost above all else
self-conscious, self-aware, self-deprecating. In 139 brilliant
footnotes to ‘Culture,’ Spivak carries on a running engagement with
the flotsam and jetsam (what Walter Benjamin called the ‘detritus’
of culture or ‘Trash of History’) of what passes for public life
and the attendant information and culture industry in this global
thing we live in: ad campaigns by clothing designers, articles and
stories from the New York Times or ‘Good Morning America’… Spivak’s
tone makes the book a constant pleasure. A mocking smile seems
always present, along with sincere engagement with important
issues… From the first page of the preface to her footnote almost
400 pages later about the exchange with the World Bank official at
the European Parliament, Spivak focuses on the ignorant, arrogant
Eurocentric destruction of people and the environment and the
enabling practices of culture that make it possible… This is a most
important and significant book.
*World Literature Today*
Spivak focuses on the relationship of debates in philosophy,
history, and literature to the emergence of a postcolonial
problematic. Overall, she seeks to distance herself from mainstream
postcolonial literature and to reassert the value of earlier
theorists such as Kant and Marx… Those already interested in the
postmodern and postcolonial debates may find her style
invigorating.
*Library Journal*
Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, one of the foremost thinkers in
postcolonial theory, looks at the place of her discipline in the
academic ‘culture wars.’ A Critique of Post-Colonial Reason
includes a reworking of her most influential essay, ‘Can the
Subaltern Speak?’ which has previously appeared in only one
anthology.
*Publishers Weekly*
Gayatri Spivak works with remarkable complexity and skill to evoke
the local details of emergent agency in an international frame. Her
extraordinary attention to the texts she reads and her ability to
track the reach of global power make her one of the unparalleled
intellectuals of our time.
*Judith Butler, author of The Psychic Life of Power*
A founder of postcolonial studies surveys the current state of the
field and finds much to criticize. This is vintage Spivak—dazzling,
often exasperating, but unfailingly powerful.
*Partha Chatterjee, author of The Nation and Its
Fragments*
In these pages Gayatri Spivak performs what often seems either
impossible or purely gestural—a critique of transnational
globalization which manages to be equally attuned to its cultural
and economic effects. This book deserves to be read for its
modulated defense of Marxism and feminism alone. It will be
welcomed as the clearest statement to date of Spivak’s own
relationship to the postcolonial theory with which she
herself—wrongly, as she forcefully argues here—is so often
identified. With a brilliance that is uniquely hers, Spivak issues
a challenge which will be very hard to avoid to the limits of
theory and of academic institutions alike.
*Jacqueline Rose, author of States of Fantasy*
Gayatri Spivak tells us that here she charts her progress from
colonial discourse studies to transnational cutlural studies. She
does so brilliantly. And she does so much more. She constructs this
extraordinary progress through an intricate labyrinth, but one with
blazing lights in every corner.
*Saskia Sassen, author of Globalization and Its Discontents*
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