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Postcolonial criticism emerged in the 1990s and undermines universalist claims that disregard regional, national, cultural, and social differences. This perspective aims to reclaim the past of the "colonized" and erode colonialist ideology. Edward Said's Orientalism was a groundbreaking work that highlighted the portrayal of the East as "other" and explored the representation of non-Europeans. Postcolonial critics reject universalism, analyze literature's silence on colonialism, and celebrate diversity and "Otherness."
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Postcolonial Criticism From Beginning Theory
Postcolonialism • Emerged in the 1990’s • Undermines universalist claims • Universal claims disregard difference Regional National Cultural Social • White Eurocentric norms should not be privileged
To Achieve Postcolonial Perspective • First step for the “colonized” is to reclaim their own past • i.e.. History did not begin with the Europeans • Second step is to erode colonialist ideology that devalued their past
Orientalism (continued) • Filled with anonymous masses of people (not individuals) • Actions determined by instinct (lust, terror, fury, etc.) vs. logic • Their reactions are determined by racial considerations rather than individual circumstance
Ground Breaking Work • Edward Said’s Orientalism • East is seen as “other”; inferior to the West • East is portrayed as projection of negative aspects cruelty, sensuality, decadence, laziness, etc. • Yet East is also portrayed as exotic, mystical, seductive
Characteristics of Postcolonial Criticism 1. An awareness of representation of non-Europeans as exotic or ‘Other’ 2. Concern with language Some conclude the colonizer's language is permanently tainted, to write in it involves acquiescence in colonial structures
Characteristics of Postcolonial Criticism(cont.) 3. Emphasis on identity as doubled or unstable (identify with colonizer and colonized) 4. Stress on cross cultural interactions
Stages of Postcolonial Criticism • Phase 1: Analyze white representation of colonial countries…uncover bias • Phase 2: Postcolonial writers explore selves and society (The empire writes back)
What Postcolonial Critics Do • Reject claims of universalism • Examine representation of other cultures • Show how literature is silent on matters of imperialism and colonialism • Foreground questions of diversity and cultural difference • Celebrate ‘cultural polyvancy’ (belonging to more than one culture) • Assert that marginality, plurality and ‘Otherness’ are sources of energy and potential change