Critics and Writers Speak: Revisioning Post-Colonial Studies
By (Author) Igor Maver
Contributions by Silvia Albertazzi
Contributions by Anne Brewster
Contributions by John Hawley
Contributions by Graham Huggan
Contributions by Janice Kulyk Keefer
Contributions by Fukuko Kobayashi
Contributions by William Peterson
Contributions by Peter Pierce
Contributions by Robert L. Ross
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
28th March 2006
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
820.9009
Paperback
196
Width 162mm, Height 228mm, Spine 15mm
304g
This book of new essays investigates the category of the post-colonial as a theoretical concept, discourse, and state of mind. In an international forum of both literary critics and writers, these essays look at contemporary writing in English throughout the world in an attempt to revision the current critical practice of post-colonial studies. Structured as a dialogue between different views, Critics and Writers Speak will add to the self-reflexivity among post-colonial critics, extending the debate and stimulating dialogue about the future of post-colonial studies.
In this book by Igor Maver, a foremost thinker from post-socialist Slovenia, the term "post-colonial," once a household term with its detailed history of cosmetic whims, takes a vertiginous dip, seethes for a while, with other master signifiers, in the caldron of diasporic theory, to then resurface, humbled and changed utterly. -- Chantal Zabus, University of Paris XIII
Igor Maver's edited collection of essays and interviews makes an important contribution to the current debate on the future of postcolonial studies.... Maver strikes an admirable balance, acknowledging the accomplishments of post-colonial studies as well as pointing out its exhausted current status.... Both schoarls and students of literature in English will sharpen their sense of the history of the terminology and the issues facing post-colonial studies today by reading Maver's collection of essays and interviews. * Commonweal *
This lively, intelligent, and wide-ranging book is also very timely. Combining a judicious introduction, essays, and interviews, Critics and Writers Speak: Revisioning Post-Colonial Studies will help its readers to understand one of the most important developments in literary theory of the last twenty years. Charting the movement from post-colonialism understood as post-independence writing to post-colonialism understood as a set of discursive practices, Critics and Writers Speak exhibits the underlying coherence of its subject and forecasts many of its directions of future development. I recommend this book most highly. -- Karl F. Zender, University of California at Davis
Igor Maver is Professor of English at the University of Ljubljana in Slovenia.