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Learning outcomes. After this lecture you should be able to: Understand the key principles of postcolonial writing Understand the key principles of Said's Orientalism Understand the applications of postcolonial thinking in international relations theory and international politics. . .
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1. Chapter 12: Postcolonialism by Siba N. Grovogui
2. Learning outcomes After this lecture you should be able to:
Understand the key principles of postcolonial writing
Understand the key principles of Said’s Orientalism
Understand the applications of postcolonial thinking in international relations theory and international politics
3. Postcolonialsm Postcolonialism
Highlights that in celebrating reason, science and technology, the Europeans have degraded the culture, arts and science in non-European societies
Implicates academic disciplines with this process and contests the Western rationalist, humanist and universalist modes of thinking
Draws on a multiplicity of perspectives from different regions, historical contexts and academic disciplines
4. Knowledge and power Postcolonialism notes that knowledge and power are intertwined
knowledge power
Postcolonialism is sceptical of everyday knowledge, expert knowledge as well as Western efforts to save the underprivileged as hiding colonial categories and tendencies
5. Challenging the Western canon Postcolonialists challenge classical Western canon and draw three conclusions:
We must note the political effects of categories such as international order, society or ethics derivative from colonial history
There are double movements of presence and erasure in Western moral debates
3) Postcolonialism is sceptical of the objectivism and neutrality implied by Western disciplinary narratives
6. Postcolonialism and International Relations Postcolonialism points to the forms of violence that went with the European creation of international order
In International Relations, postcolonialism harbours a suspicion of the universalisms and rationalizations of the liberals and the mutuality and co-constitutions of norms emphasised by the constructivists
Postcolonialism is associated with the study of identity and culture in their fluid contexts. They see both dangers and opportunities in their transformation
7. Said and Orientalism Said’s Orientalism emphasised the techniques of power at work in Western language and representations of the Middle East
One can utilise Said’s framework in analysing today’s images of the Middle East as well as those from the past
The war on terror can be seen to embody particular definitions and discourses of terrorism that arise from Orientalism
existence of separate hierarchical spheres of civilisations,
need to defend Western values against corrupt ones and
necessity of moderate Arabs to join the Western framework
These, however, present a particular view of history and present that distorts historical co-dependencies and cultural nuances
8. Postcolonialsim on imperial legacy Postcolonial thinking requires that one is able to challenge the disciplinary common sense.
The notion of Pax Britannica expresses British empire in a positive light. Postcolonialism notes that the experiences of the colonized differ substantially from those of the colonisers
A postcolonial understanding of nuclear non-proliferation treaties reveals that the treaties, while inhibiting the ability of weaker post-colonial states to gain arms, allow the proliferation of nuclear arms in the possession of the western states to go unnoticed.
9. Case study: Suez Canal The accounts of the Suez Canal War still read as stories of superpower balance of power and recklessness of third world nationalism
To postcolonialists the decision of Britain, France and Israel to wage war on Egypt was illogical, and reckless in its own way: Nasser was right that the internationalization of Suez was a throwback to European notions of imperial sovereignty and went against the post-war notion of self-determination
10. Conclusion Postcolonialism
Seeks contingent and empathic understandings of human trajectories and favours egalitarianism, social justice and solidarity
Advances a different kind of universalism based on deliberation and contestation amongst diverse political entities
Notes the failure of the international system to fully include postcolonial nations in decision-making and is sceptical of hegemony, unilateral rules and memory of international relations
Recognises the fluidity and hybridity of culture and identity