Locating Race provides a powerful critique of theories and fictions of globalization that privilege migration, transnationalism, and flows. Malini Johar Schueller argues that in order to resist racism and imperialism in the United States we need to focus on local understandings of how different racial groups are specifically constructed and oppressed by the nation-state and imperial relations. In the writings of Black Nationalists, Native American activists, and groups like Partido Nacional La Raza Unida, the author finds an imagined identity of post-colonial citizenship based on a race- and place-based activism that forms solidarities with oppressed groups worldwide and suggests possibilities for a radical globalism.
Inhoudsopgave
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
1. Theorizing Race, Postcoloniality, and Globalization
Part 1. RACIAL ERASURE IN GLOBAL THEORY
2. Expunging the Politics of Location: Articulations of African Americanism in Bhabha, Appadurai, and Spivak
3. Border Crossing, Analogy, and Universalism in (White) Feminist Theory: The Color of the Cyborg Body
Part 2. FROM THE GLOBAL IMPERIAL TO THE POST-COLONIAL
4. Globalization and Orientalism: Iyer’s
Video Night in Kathmandu, Alexander’s
Fault Lines and Mukherjee’s
Jasmine
5. Claiming National Space and Postcolonial Critique: The Asian American Performances of Tseng Kwong Chi
Part 3. POSSIBILITIES FOR POST-COLONIAL CITIZENSHIP
6. Black Nationalism and Anti-Imperial Resistance in Assata Shakur’s
Autobiography
7. Recognition and Decolonization in Silko’s
Almanac of the Dead
Conclusion. Rethinking Keywords and Notes on Located Resistances Today
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index
Over de auteur
Malini Johar Schueller is Professor of English at the University of Florida and the author of
The Politics of Voice: Liberalism and Social Criticism from Franklin to Kingston, also published by SUNY Press, and
U.S. Orientalisms: Race, Nation, and Gender in Literature, 1790–1890.