Routledge
New Titles and Key Backlist
Postcolonial Studies
2008/2009
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Highlights
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POSTCOLONIAL STUDIES CATALOGUE 2008 Trade customers’ representatives, agents and distribution
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POSTCOLONIAL STUDIES NEW
NEW
Book History Through Postcolonial Eyes
Caliban’s Voice The Transformation of English in Post-Colonial Literatures
Re-writing the Script
Bill Ashcroft, University of Hong Kong
Robert Fraser, The Open University, UK This surprising study draws together the disparate fields of postcolonial theory and book history in a challenging and illuminating way. Robert Fraser proposes that we now look beyond the traditional methods of the Anglo-European bibliographic paradigm, and learn to appreciate instead the diversity of shapes that verbal expression has assumed across different societies. This change of attitude will encourage students and researchers to question developmentally conceived models of communication, and move instead to a re-formulation of just what is meant by a book, an author, a text. Robert Fraser illustrates his combined approach with comparative case studies of print, script and speech cultures in South Asia and Africa, before panning out to examine conflicts and paradoxes arising in parallel contexts. The re-orientation of approach and the freshness of view offered by this volume will foster understanding and creative collaboration between scholars of different outlooks, while offering a radical critique to those identified in its concluding section as purveyors of global literary power. Selected Contents: Preface. List of Plates and Tables. Acknowledgements Part 1: Repositionings 1. The Problematics of Print 2. Scripts and Manuscripts Part 2: Places 3. Transmitting the Word in South Asia 4. Transmitting the Word in Africa Part 3: Powers 5. Resistance and Adaptation 6. Communication and Authority 7. Licensed Policeman and Literary Protestors 8. The Power of the Consumer. Works Cited and Bibliography. Index June 2008: 216x138: 224pp Hb: 978-0-415-40293-4: £60.00 Pb: 978-0-415-40294-1: £18.99 eBook: 978-0-203-88811-7
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Caliban’s Voice examines the ways in which postcolonial literatures have transformed English to redefine what we understand to be ’English Literature’. It investigates the importance of language learning in the imperial mission, the function of language in ideas of race and place, the link between language and identity, the move from orature to literature and the significance of translation. By demonstrating the dialogue that occurs between writers and readers in literature, Bill Ashcroft argues that cultural identity is not locked up in language, but that language, even a dominant colonial language, can be transformed to convey the realities of many different cultures. Using the figure of Caliban, Bill Ashcroft weaves a consistent and resonant thread through his discussion of the postcolonial experience of life in the English language, and the power of its transformation into new and creative forms. Selected Contents: Introduction 1. Prospero’s Language, Caliban’s Voice 2. Language, Learning and Power 3. Language and Race 4. Language and Place 5. Language and Identity 6. Language, Culture and Meaning: The Caribbean 7. Caliban’s Books – Orality and Writing 8. How Books Talk 9. Translation and Transformation. Bibliography August 2008: 234x156: 208pp Hb: 978-0-415-47043-8: £60.00 Pb: 978-0-415-47044-5: £18.99 eBook: 978-0-203-09105-0
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POSTCOLONIAL STUDIES
NEW
NEW
2ND EDITION
Travel Writing, Form, and Empire
Edward Said
The Poetics and Politics of Mobility
Bill Ashcroft, University of Hong Kong and Pal Ahluwalia, University of South Australia, Australia
Edited by Julia Kuehn and Paul Smethurst, both at University of Hong Kong
Series: Routledge Critical Thinkers
Series: Routledge Research in Travel Writing
Edward Said is perhaps best known as the author of the landmark study Orientalism, a book which changed the face of critical theory and shaped the emerging field of postcolonial studies, and for his controversial journalism on the Palestinian political situation. Looking at the context and the impact of Said’s scholarship and journalism, this book examines Said’s key ideas, including: • the significance of ’worldliness’, ’amateurism’, ’secular criticism’, ’affiliation’ and ’contrapuntal reading’ • the place of text and critic in ’the world’ • knowledge, power and the construction of the ’Other’
Starting from the premise that travel writing studies has received much of its impetus and theoretical input from the sometimes over generalized precepts of postcolonial studies and gender studies, this collection aims to explore more widely and more locally the expression of imperialist discourse in travel writing, and also to locate within contemporary travel writing attempts to evade or re-engage with the power politics of such discourse. There is a double focus then to explore further postcolonial theory in European travel writing (Anglophone, Francophone and Hispanic), and to trace the emergence of postcolonial forms of travel writing. The thread that draws the two halves of the collection together is an interest in form and relations between form and travel. August 2008: 234x156: 254pp Hb: 978-0-415-96294-0: £60.00 eBook: 978-0-203-89097-4
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• links between culture and imperialism • exile, identity and the plight of Palestine.
NEW
This guide has been fully updated and revised in a new edition, including a new chapter looking at Said’s later work and style. It is suitable for readers approaching Said’s work for the first time as well as those already familiar with his work. The result is the ideal guide to one of the twentieth century’s most engaging critical thinkers.
Visualizing Africa in NineteenthCentury British Travel Accounts
Selected Contents: Why Said? Key Ideas 1. Worldliness: The Text 2. Worldliness: The Critic 3. Orientalism 4. Culture as Imperialism 5. Palestine 6. Said’s Late Style After Said. Further Reading
This study examines and explains how British explorers visualized the African interior in the latter part of the nineteenth century, providing the first sustained analysis of the process by which this visual material was transformed into the illustrations in popular travel books. At that time, central Africa was, effectively, a blank canvas for Europeans, unknown and devoid of visual representations. While previous works have concentrated on exploring the stereotyped nature of printed imagery of Africa, this study examines the actual production process of images and the books in which they were published in order to demonstrate how, why, and by whom the images were manipulated. Thus, the main focus of the work is not on the aesthetic value of pictures, but in the activities, interaction, and situations that gave birth to them in both Africa and Europe.
October 2008: 198x129: 208pp Hb: 978-0-415-47687-4: £55.00 Pb: 978-0-415-47689-8: £12.99 eBook: 978-0-203-88807-0 • AVAILABLE AS AN INSPECTION COPY US $95.00
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Leila Koivunen, University of Turku, Finland Series: Routledge Research in Travel Writing
November 2008: 234x156: 208pp Hb: 978-0-415-99001-1: £60.00 eBook: 978-0-203-88463-8
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POSTCOLONIAL STUDIES
3
2ND EDITION
BESTSELLER
Imperial Eyes
2ND EDITION
Travel Writing and Transculturation
The Post-Colonial Studies Reader
Mary Louise Pratt, New York University, USA
Edited by Bill Ashcroft, University of Hong Kong, Gareth Griffiths, University of West Australia, Adelaide, Australia and Helen Tiffin, Queens University, Ontario, Canada
This second edition of a highly acclaimed and interdisciplinary book, which quickly established itself as a seminal text in its field, investigates the way in which travel writing has constructed an image of the world beyond Europe for European readerships.
’Now in its second edition, The Post-Colonial Studies Reader ... is clearly designed as an introduction to the major issues in the field, and therein lies its strength.’ – Dipli Saikia, THES
Focusing on writing about South America and Africa in relation to the political and economic expansion of Europe, this long-awaited second edition: • is updated throughout, including a new preface, an updated introduction and a postscript reflecting critically on the category of the ’postcolonial’ • contains new material, which reads well-known Latin American texts through the concept of neocoloniality and continues to discuss more general questions of the postcolonial in relation to the Americas • includes new illustrations of relevant documents and artefacts discussed within the text. 2007: 234x156: 296pp Hb: 978-0-415-43816-2: £75.00 Pb: 978-0-415-43817-9: £19.99 eBook: 978-0-203-93293-3
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The essential introduction to the most important texts in postcolonial theory and criticism, this second edition has been thoroughly revised and updated to include 121 extracts from key works in the field. Leading, as well as lesser known figures in the fields of writing, theory and criticism contribute to this inspiring body of work that includes sections on nationalism, hybridity, diaspora and globalization. The Reader’s wide-ranging approach reflects the remarkable diversity of work in the discipline along with the vibrancy of anti-imperialist writing both within and without the metropolitan centres. Covering more debates, topics and critics than any comparable book in its field, The Post-Colonial Studies Reader is the ideal starting point for students and issues a potent challenge to the ways in which we think and write about literature and culture. 2005: 246x174: 544pp Hb: 978-0-415-34564-4: £70.00 Pb: 978-0-415-34565-1: £21.99
NEW IN PAPERBACK
Decolonizing Cultures in the Pacific Reading History and Trauma in Contemporary Fiction
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Susan Y. Najita, University of Michigan, USA Series: Routledge Research in Postcolonial Literatures In Decolonizing Cultures in the Pacific, Susan Y. Najita proposes that the traumatic history of contact and colonization has become a crucial means by which indigenous peoples of Oceania are reclaiming their cultures, languages, ways of knowing, and political independence. 2006: 234x156: 240pp Hb: 978-0-415-36669-4: £60.00 Pb: 978-0-415-46885-5: £19.99 eBook: 978-0-203-01940-5
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POSTCOLONIAL STUDIES The Routledge Companion to Postcolonial Studies
BESTSELLER 2ND EDITION
Edited by John McLeod, University of Leeds, UK
Post-Colonial Studies: The Key Concepts
Series: Routledge Companions The Routledge Companion to Postcolonial Studies offers a unique and up-to-date mapping of the postcolonial world, and is composed of essays as well as shorter entries for ease of reference. Introducing students to the history of the great European empires and the cultural legacies created in their wake, this book brings together an international range of contributors on topics such as:
Bill Ashcroft, University of Hong Kong, Gareth Griffiths, University of West Australia, Adelaide, Australia and Helen Tiffin, Queen’s University, Ontario, Canada Series: Routledge Key Guides This guide, now in its second edition, provides an essential key to understanding the issues which characterize postcolonialism; explaining what it is, where it is encountered, and why it is crucial in forging new cultural identities. As a subject, postcolonial studies stands at the intersection of debates about race, colonialism, gender, politics and language. Key topics covered include:
• the diverse postcolonial and diasporic cultural endeavours from Africa, the Americas, Australasia, Europe, and South and East Asia • the major theoretical formulations: post-structuralist, materialist, culturalist, psychological. With a comprehensive A to Z of forty key writers and thinkers central to contemporary postcolonial studies and featuring historical maps, this is both a concise introduction and an essential resource for any student of postcolonial culture, whatever their field.
• borderlands • transnational literatures • neo imperialism • neo liberalism • eco feminism. Post-Colonial Studies: The Key Concepts is fully updated and cross referenced throughout. With updated further reading sections for each entry, this book has everything for students and anyone keen to learn more about this fascinating subject. 2007: 216x138: 304pp Hb: 978-0-415-42856-9: £60.00 Pb: 978-0-415-42855-2: £14.99
• the colonial histories of Britain, France, Spain and Portugal
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Selected Contents: Introduction. Part 1: The Colonial Empires. The British Empire. The French Empire. The Spanish and Portuguese Empires. The Dutch Empire. Part 2: Postcolonial Locations. Africa (North and Central). Australasia. Canada. Caribbean. Ireland. South America. Southern Africa. South and East Asia. US and European Diasporas. Part 3: Postcolonial Formulations. Psychological Formulations. Poststructuralist Formulations. Materialist Formulations. Culturalist Formulations. Part 4: Key Writers and Thinkers. Chronology. Further Reading. Index of Key Concepts 2007: 234x156: 272pp Hb: 978-0-415-32496-0: £60.00 Pb: 978-0-415-32497-7: £16.99 eBook: 978-0-203-35808-5 • AVAILABLE AS AN INSPECTION COPY US $120.00
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POSTCOLONIAL STUDIES BESTSELLER
Writing Across Worlds
2ND EDITION
Contemporary Writers Talk
Colonialism/Postcolonialism
Edited by Susheila Nasta, The Open University, UK From Chinua Achebe to Marina Warner, Writing Across Worlds brings together new interviews with major international writers previously featured in the pages of Wasafiri magazine, founded in 1984.
Ania Loomba Series: The New Critical Idiom ’Colonialism/Postcolonialism is both a crystal-clear and authoritative introduction to the field and a cogently-argued defence of the field’s radical potential. It’s exactly the sort of book teachers want their students to read.’ – Peter Hulme, Department of Literature, Film and Theatre Studies, University of Essex, UK Recommended on courses across academic disciplines and around the world, Ania Loomba’s Colonialism/Postcolonialism has for some years been accepted as the essential introduction to this vibrant and politically charged area of literary and cultural study.
2004: 198x129: 392pp Hb: 978-0-415-34566-8: £55.00 Pb: 978-0-415-34567-5: £12.99 eBook: 978-0-203-34248-0
Critical Moments in Anglophone Literary History Alison Donnell, University of Reading, UK ’This book will extend the archive of Caribbean texts in challenging and exciting ways, and is likely to initiate more generous and promiscuous readings of Caribbean writings, as well as making a valuable contribution to debates about the local and the global which are so central to postcolonial studies.’ – Denise deCaires Narain, University of Sussex, UK
• the relationship of colonial discourse to literature • challenges to colonialism, including anticolonial discourses • recent developments in postcolonial theories and histories • issues of sexuality and colonialism, and the intersection of feminist and postcolonial thought.
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Twentieth-Century Caribbean Literature
• key features of the ideologies and history of colonialism
2005: 198x129: 272pp Hb: 978-0-415-35063-1: £55.00 Pb: 978-0-415-35064-8: £12.99 eBook: 978-0-203-69614-9 • AVAILABLE AS AN INSPECTION COPY
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• AVAILABLE AS AN INSPECTION COPY
This remarkably comprehensive yet accessible guide to the historical and theoretical dimensions of colonial and postcolonial studies introduces and examines:
With extended coverage of emerging debates around globalization, as well as a fully updated bibliography, this second edition is the ideal guide for students new to colonial discourse theory, postcolonial studies or postcolonial theory.
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This bold study traces the processes by which a ‘history’ and canon of Caribbean literature and criticism have been constructed. It offers a supplement to that history by presenting new writers, texts and critical moments that help to reconfigure the Caribbean tradition. Identifying alternative critical approaches and critical moments, Twentieth-Century Caribbean Literature allows us to re-examine the way in which we read not only Caribbean writings, but also the literary history and criticism that surround them. 2005: 234x156: 288pp Hb: 978-0-415-26199-9: £60.00 Pb: 978-0-415-26200-2: £17.99 eBook: 978-0-203-96263-3 • AVAILABLE AS AN INSPECTION COPY US $110.00
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POSTCOLONIAL STUDIES
NEW
Recharting the Black Atlantic Modern Cultures, Local Communities, Global Connections Edited by Annalisa Oboe and Anna Scacchi Series: Routledge Research in Atlantic Studies This book focuses on the migrations and metamorphoses of black bodies, practices, and discourses around the Atlantic, particularly with regard to current issues such as questions of identity, political and human rights, cosmopolitics, and mnemo-history. March 2008: 234x156: 438pp Hb: 978-0-415-96111-0: £60.00 eBook: 978-0-203-92958-2
Routledge Research in Postcolonial Literatures Series Edited in collaboration with the Centre for Colonial and Postcolonial Studies, University of Kent at Canterbury, this series presents a wide range of research into postcolonial literatures by specialists in the field. Volumes concentrate on writers and writing originating in previously (or presently) colonized areas, and include material from non-anglophone as well as anglophone colonies and literatures.
NEW
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Beyond the Black Atlantic
Postcolonialism, Psychoanalysis and Burton
Relocating Modernization and Technology
Power Play of Empire
Edited by Walter Goebel and Saskia Schabio, both at University of Stuttgart, Germany
Ben Grant, University of Kent, UK
Debates about the ‘Black Atlantic’ have alerted us to an experience of modernization that diverges from the dominant Western narratives of globalization and technological progress. This outstanding volume expands the concept of the Black Atlantic by reaching beyond the usual African-American focus of the field, presenting fresh perspectives on postcolonial experiences of technology and modernization. A team of renowned contributors come together in this volume in order to: • redefine and expand ideas of the Black Atlantic • challenge unified concepts of modernization from a postcolonial perspective • question fashionable concepts of the transnational by returning to the local and the national • offer new approaches to cross-cultural mechanisms of exchange • explore utopian uses of technology in the postcolonial sphere. Exploring a variety of national, diasporan and transnational counternarratives to Western modernization, Beyond the Black Atlantic makes a valuable contribution to the fields of postcolonial, literary and cultural studies. 2006: 216x138: 224pp Hb: 978-0-415-39797-1: £60.00 Pb: 978-0-415-39798-8: £19.99 eBook: 978-0-203-96972-4
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By engaging closely with the work of Richard Francis Burton (1821–90), the iconic nineteenth century imperial spy, explorer, anthropologist and translator, Postcolonialism, Psychoanalysis and Burton explores the White Man’s ‘imperial fantasies’, and the ways in which the many metropolitan discourses to which Burton contributed drew upon and reinforced an intimate connection between fantasy and power in the space of Empire. This original study sheds new light on the mechanisms of imperial appropriation and pays particular attention to Burton’s relationship with his alter ego, Abdullah, the name by which he famously travelled to Mecca and Medina disguised as a Muslim pilgrim. In this context, Grant also provides insightful readings of a number of Burton’s contemporaries, such as Müller, du Chaillu, Darwin and Huxley, and engages with postcolonial and psychoanalytic theory in order to highlight the problematic relationship between the ‘individual’ and imperialism, and to encourage readers to think about what it means to read colonial history and imperial narrative today. August 2008: 234x156: 214pp Hb: 978-0-415-45086-7: £60.00
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POSTCOLONIAL STUDIES NEW
Contemporary Arab Women Writers
Transnationalism in Southern African Literature
Cultural Expression in Context Anastasia Valassopoulos
Modernists, Realists, and the Inequality of Print Culture Stefan Helgesson In this study, Stefan Helgesson suggests that the prevalence of ‘colonial’ languages such as English and Portuguese in ‘anticolonial’ or ‘postcolonial’ African Literature is primarily an effect of the print network. Stefan Helgesson aims to demystify the authority of English and Portuguese by stressing the materiality of the print medium and emphasizing the strong transnational and transcontinental vectors of southern African literature after the Second World War. August 2008: 234x156: 170pp Hb: 978-0-415-46239-6: £60.00 eBook: 978-0-203-43151-1
This book engages with contemporary Arab women writers from Egypt, Palestine, Lebanon and Algeria. In spite of Edward Said’s groundbreaking reappraisal of the uneven relationship between the West and the Arab world in Orientalism, there has been little postcolonial criticism of Arab writing. Discussing the writings of authors including Ahdaf Soueif, Nawal El Saadawi, Leila Sebbar, Liana Badr and Hanan Al-Shaykh, this book represents a new direction in postcolonial literary criticism that transcends constrictive monothematic approaches. 2007: 234x156: 192pp Hb: 978-0-415-35355-7: £60.00 eBook: 978-0-203-30709-0
Decolonising Gender Literature and a Poetics of the Real Caroline Rooney Through examination of the functions of language and cross-cultural readings of literature – from African queer reading to postcolonial Shakespeare – Caroline Rooney explores the nature of the real, providing:
Postcolonial Theory and Autobiography David Huddart Despite the fact that autobiography is frequently dismissed for its Western, masculine bias, David Huddart argues for its continued relevance as a central explanatory category in understanding postcolonial theory and its relation to subjectivity. Focusing on the influence of post-structuralist theory on postcolonial theory and vice versa, this study suggests that autobiography constitutes a general philosophical resistance to universal
• a way out of some of the current deadlocks of feminist theory • an anti-essentialist approach to gender in which both male and female readers may address a consciousness of the feminine • a platform for postcolonial and postmodernist thinkers to engage in a dialogue around the status of the performative in regard to the other • a new theory of poetic realism in both canonical and postcolonial literatures • a re-reading of the Enlightenment legacy in terms of postcolonial liberation theory • a comparison of contemporary debates on the real, across the humanities and the sciences. 2007: 234x156: 264pp Hb: 978-0-415-42418-9: £60.00 eBook: 978-0-203-93359-6
concepts and theories. Offering a fresh perspective on familiar critical figures like Edward W. Said and Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, by putting them in the context of readings of the work of Jacques Derrida, Gilles Deleuze, and Alain Badiou, this book relates the theory of autobiography to expressions of new universalisms that, together with postcolonial theory, rethink and extend norms of experience, investigation, and knowledge. 2007: 234x156: 208pp Hb: 978-0-415-35342-7: £60.00 eBook: 978-0-203-30657-4
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JOURNALS
Postcolonial Studies
Wasafiri
Journal of the Institute of Postcolonial Studies
The Magazine of International Contemporary Writing
Postcolonial Studies is the first journal specifically aimed at publishing work which explores the various facets of textual, figural, spatial, historical, political and economics of the colonial encounter, and the ways in which this encounter shaped the West and non-West alike. Volume 11, 2008, 4 issues per year Print ISSN 1368-8790 Online ISSN 1466-1888
Interventions International Journal of Postcolonial Studies
Wasafiri is a literary magazine at the forefront in mapping new landscapes in contemporary international literature today. In over twenty years of publishing, it has continued to provide consistent coverage to Britain’s diverse cultural heritage and publishes a range of diasporic and migrant writing worldwide. Volume 23, 2008, 4 issues per year Print ISSN 0269-0055 Online ISSN 1747-1508
Journal of Postcolonial Writing
A specialist peer-reviewed Journal focusing on the following aspects of postcolonial research, theory and politics: identity, race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, economics, diaspora, migrancy, religion and culture.
The Journal of Postcolonial Writing (previously World Literature Written in English) is a peer reviewed academic journal and provides a forum for debate about literature written in English and published throughout the world. It aims to provide the interface between the postcolonial writing of the modern global era and the economic forces of production which increasingly commodify culture.
Volume 10, 2008, 3 issues per year Print ISSN 1369-801X Online ISSN 1469-929X
English Academy Review Southern African Journal of English Studies The English Academy Review is the journal of the English Academy of Southern Africa. In line with the Academy's vision of promoting effective English as a vital resource and of respecting Africa's diverse linguistic ecology, it welcomes submissions on language as well as educational, philosophical and literary topics from Southern Africa and across the globe. In addition to refereed academic articles, it publishes creative writing and book reviews of significant new publications as well as lectures and proceedings.
Volume 44, 2008, 4 issues per year Print ISSN 1744-9855 Online ISSN 1744-9863
Journal of Literary Studies The Journal of Literary Studies, published in both English and Afrikaans, provides a forum for the discussion of literary theory, methodology, research, and related matters. It features articles, commentary, book reviews and general announcements. All contributions are peer-reviewed. Volume 24, 2008, 4 issues per year Print ISSN:0256-4718 Online ISSN: 1753-5387
Volume 25, 2008, 2 issues per year Print ISSN: 1013-1752 Online ISSN:1753-5360
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