Postcolonial literature Essays

  • Hybridity and National Identity in Postcolonial Literature

    2599 Words  | 6 Pages

    Hybridity and National Identity in Postcolonial Literature Every human being, in addition to having their own personal identity, has a sense of who they are in relation to the larger community--the nation. Postcolonial studies is the attempt to strip away conventional perspective and examine what that national identity might be for a postcolonial subject. To read literature from the perspective of postcolonial studies is to seek out--to listen for, that indigenous, representative voice which

  • Postcolonial Conflicts In Kiran Desai's Post-Colonial Literature

    1419 Words  | 3 Pages

    create a new form of fiction within the English language by incorporating new images and above all new rhythms. One of the major features of postcolonial texts is the concern with place and displacement, shifting of location and resulting in " the crisis of identity into being" (Bill Ashcroft and et al., 47).Often, the protagonist of a post- colonial work will find himself/herself in a struggle to establish an identity; feeling conflicted between two cultures - one his own native culture and the

  • Critical Criticism Of Postcolonial Literature

    778 Words  | 2 Pages

    Postcolonial Literature In Postcolonial criticism, it draws attention to issues of cultural differences in literary texts. It is one of the critical approaches that are considered to focuses on specific issues. These specific issues include gender, class, and sexual orientation. Postcolonial critics reject the claims to universalism and seek to show its limitations. It examines the representation of other cultures in literature and it shows how such literature is often silent on matters concerned

  • Postcolonialism And Post-Colonial Literature

    995 Words  | 2 Pages

    colonized countries or nations got their independence and got a way out under colonials. This era like the rest of other literary eras has various particular characteristics and aspects. Most commonly the aspects of Post-colonial literature fall into; history, literature, politics, culture and identity of both the countries that were colonized and colonial countries. However, Postcolonialism can take the colonial time into consideration as well as the time after colonialism. Postcolonialism also deals

  • Subverting Power: The Lesson of Post-Colonial Literature

    2697 Words  | 6 Pages

    Subverting Power: The Lesson of Post-Colonial Literature Your Name School Affiliation Outline A. Introduction Thesis: Adgar and Alizdeh, as representatives of post-colonial literature, provide evidence that otherness, essentialism and orientalism are notions that explain the issues that arise in the contemporary world as a result of imperial tendencies on the part of Western societies, and their writing suggests a peculiar form of struggle which is rooted in subversion and internal critique of systems

  • Post-colonial Theory: Indian Literature

    1982 Words  | 4 Pages

    belonging. In Post-colonial writings the themes which are focused on are nationalism, self-identification to anti-imperialistic critique and postcolonial protest. Often protest writing has a political agenda of social change and expresses anger and disillusion at the postcolonial nation state. Nayar points out, “resistance literature in both the colony and the postcolonial nation include testimonial writings, prison narratives, revolutionary tracts and ‘insurgency’ writing. The rise and changes through technology

  • Post-colonial Encounters in the Early 20th Century

    1276 Words  | 3 Pages

    tone of the poem is pessimistic which is understandable since Noyes is writing during the Naturalist period of English literature. Noyes is speaking to the middle class of England; those who “fulfill their duties as they come” (Noyes, 45). He uses the first person plural article to create a unification between the readers and the narrator. Noyes, in his poem, addresses two postcolonial themes of Christianity as a vehicle of colonization, and the fallacies of European philosophy. In this essay, I argue

  • Magic realism as post-colonialist device in Midnight's Children

    2650 Words  | 6 Pages

    post-modern text as signifying a change from 'modernism's ahistorical burden of the past': it is a text that 'self-consciously reconstruct[s] its relationship to what came before' (131). The post-modern is linked by magic realism to 'post-colonial literatures [which] are also negotiating....the same tyrannical weight of colonial history in conjunction with the past' (131). Before discussing magic realism in Midnight's Children, a brief definition of the term "post-colonialism"as I intend to use it

  • Writers and Intellectuals in Exile

    2495 Words  | 5 Pages

    Writers and Intellectuals in Exile “It may be that writers in my position, exiles… are haunted by some sense of loss, some urge to reclaim, to look back, even at the risk of being mutated into pillars of salt”1 said Salman Rushdie. The loss and love of home is not what constitutes an exilic existence; what actually and in true sense constitutes it is the chasm between carrying forth and leaving behind and straddling the two different cultures from two different positions. In my paper, I propose

  • Post Colonial Literature

    1020 Words  | 3 Pages

    post-colonialism addresses reactions to colonialism in a context that is not necessarily determined by temporal constraints: post-colonial plays, novels, verse, and films then become textual/cultural expressions of resistance to colonization (p.2). Postcolonial literature usually focuses on race relations, the effects of racism, the mass extinction of peoples, such as the Aborigines in Australia and often indicts white and/or colonial societies. In Alan Lawson’s words, “post-colonialism is a ‘politically motivated

  • Salman Rushdie’s Midnight’s Children

    4081 Words  | 9 Pages

    Salman Rushdie uses narrative technique, genre and the concept of history in a very new way in Midnight’s Children in order to place his story outside the euro-centric tradition of literature, narrative and history. These traditions, appearing in the colonial period, have constructed a notion of universalism in literature where the ‘classics’ of the western canon have set the order of the day (Ashcroft 91-92). Additionally, history has been written with Europe as the subject of all interpretations

  • Analysis of Salman Rushdie's Midnight's Children

    1061 Words  | 3 Pages

    Analysis of Salman Rushdie's Midnight's Children Salman Rushdie’s novel Midnight’s Children employs strategies which engage in an exploration of History, Nationalism and Hybridity. This essay will examine three passages from the novel which demonstrate these issues. Furthermore, it will explore why each passage is a good demonstration of these issues, how these issues apply to India in the novel, and how the novel critiques these concepts. The passage from pages 37-38 effectively demonstrates

  • Midnight Children Analysis

    1074 Words  | 3 Pages

    Indian-Canadian director Deepa Mehta 's film based on Salman Rushdie 's novel Midnight’s Children is a clear example of a post-colonial work. Midnight’s Children follows two children, both born at precisely midnight, on the exact day that India gained independence from Great Britain. Shiva is born to wealthy parents, while Saleem enters the world as the son of a beggar, but a nurse switches the two boys at birth. Throughout the film, the narrator, Saleem, explains both families’ histories, and in

  • Postcolonial Literature: Uncovering Western Myths

    1296 Words  | 3 Pages

    the African communities through his novel Things Fall Apart, more especifically, nigerian tribes. In this essay, I will attempt to analyze from a postcolonial approach themes present in the novel such as identity, ... ... middle of paper ... ...gs Fall Apart helps us to shed light on the darkness produced by the colonizer's actions and further literature, because there was never darkness on Africa; the darkness was brought by the westerns and their complex of superiority. Works Cited Achebe

  • Salman Rushdie's Views on Literature and its Vital Role in the Success of Mankind

    506 Words  | 2 Pages

    Salman Rushdie's Views on Literature and its Vital Role in the Success of Mankind Salman Rushdie, addresses the issue of literature and its vital role in the success of mankind. He uses many different reasons to persuade the reader that the art of literature, mediates between the material and spiritual worlds; thus, rising it's prominence to holy literature or rather above it. He states that literature is the least compromised and thus the finest form of art. Literature allows us to deal with debates

  • ‘Who am I when I am transported?’ Postcolonialism and Peter Carey’s Jack Maggs

    1424 Words  | 3 Pages

    ‘Who am I when I am transported?’ Postcolonialism and Peter Carey’s Jack Maggs In Decolonising Fictions, theorists Diana Brydon and Helen Tiffin claim that postcolonial writers create texts that ‘write back’ against imperial fictions and question the values once taken for granted by the once dominant Anglocentric discourse of the imperial epicentre. In Jack Maggs the process of ‘writing back’ is well illustrated. As in Jean Rhy’s Wide Sargasso Sea , the colonial ‘other’ character from a canonised

  • Midnight's Children Postmodernism

    990 Words  | 2 Pages

    Rushdie, Postmodernism & Postcolonialism Rushdie’s Midnight’s Children, published in 1980, was perhaps the seminal text in conceiving opinions as to interplay of post-modern and post-colonial theory. The title of the novel refers to the birth of Saleem Sinai, the novel’s principal narrator, who is born at midnight August 15th 1947, the precise date of Indian independence. From this remarkable coincidence we are immediately drawn to the conclusion that the novel’s concerns are of the new India

  • Salman Rushdi: Using Magical Realism as a Post-Colonial Device

    1885 Words  | 4 Pages

    Salman Rushdie is a meta-fiction writer, composing Midnight’s Children in a way that systematically draws attention to the fact that it’s a fictitious concoction questioning the relationship between fiction and reality. In Midnight’s Children, Rushdie uses historical events as reference points in the lives of his characters. Saleem Sinai’s life, and the lives of his familial predecessors, is defined by historical events. Beyond using historical events to denote the lives of his characters, Rushdie

  • Colonialism and Beyond

    2811 Words  | 6 Pages

    Conrad's Heart of Darkness, No Longer at Ease, Things Fall Apart, Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness, Emmanuel Nelson's Chinua Achebe, Postcolonial African Writers, Willene Taylor's A Search for Values in Things Fall Apart, Colin Turnbull's he Lonely African This course on colonial and post-colonial literature satisfies my cravings for thought and literature that falls outside of the mainstream of the Eurocentric view of things. Achebe, Walcott, Arundhati, and Kincaid etc. the so-called marginalized-

  • Impact Of Post Colonialism In Literature

    1727 Words  | 4 Pages

    represents time and literature produced after a colonial reign of the erstwhile colonized nation. Colonization thus being the marker or the point of distinction based on which literature in this case is categorized. Colonization leaves an indelible mark on the colonized even after the colonial reign is politically over. This mark is seen in various fields with literature being no exception. It is probably in literature where the effect of colonization is most felt as literature, traditionally reflects