Postcolonial Criticism

Despite the reservations and debates, research in Postcolonial Studies is growing because postcolonial critique allows for a wide-ranging investigation into power relations in various contexts. The formation of empire, the impact of colonization on postcolonial history, economy, science, and culture, the cultural productions of colonized societies, feminism and postcolonialism, agency for marginalized people, and the state of the postcolony in contemporary economic and cultural contexts are some broad topics in the field. The following questions suggest some of the major issues in the field:

  1. How did the experience of colonization affect those who were colonized while also influencing the colonizers?
  2. How were colonial powers able to gain control over so large a portion of the non-Western world?
  3. What traces have been left by colonial education, science and technology in postcolonial societies?
  4. How do these traces affect decisions about development and modernization in postcolonies?
  5. What were the forms of resistance against colonial control?
  6. How did colonial education and language influence the culture and identity of the colonized?
  7. How did Western science, technology, and medicine change existing knowledge systems?
  8. What are the emergent forms of postcolonial identity after the departure of the colonizers?
  9. To what extent has decolonization (a reconstruction free from colonial influence) been possible?
  10. Are Western formulations of postcolonialism overemphasizing hybridity at the expense of material realities?
  11. Should decolonization proceed through an aggressive return to the pre-colonial past (related topic: Essentialism)?
  12.  How do gender, race, and class function in colonial and postcolonial discourse? Are new forms of imperialism replacing colonization and how?
Along with these questions, there are some more that are particularly pertinent to postcolonial literature: Should the writer use a colonial language to reach a wider audience or return to a native language more relevant to groups in the postcolony? Which writers should be included in the postcolonial canon? How can texts in translation from non-colonial languages enrich our understanding of postcolonial issues? Has the preponderance of the postcolonial novel led to a neglect of other genres?

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