Rethinking Postsecularism through Postcolonialism (original) (raw)

The Promise of Postcolonial Postsecularism

Review of the book, Religion in South Asian Anglophone Literature: Traversing Resistance, Margins and Extremism written by Professor Asha Sen at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire.

Book Forum Article: "The Intersections of Postcolonialism, Postsecularism, and Literary Studies: Potentials, Limitations, Bibliographies"

Sikh Formations: Religion, Culture, Theory, 2022

This article presents some features, potentials, limitations, and bibliographies of the intersection of postcolonialism, postsecularism, and literary studies. It examines literatures, cultures, religions, indigenous beliefs and practices, and political imaginaries from Africa, Europe, and South Asia. The religions discussed include Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, and Sikhism. The article shows how the institutional and discursive emergence of postcolonial postsecularism, including its intersection with literary studies, can draw lessons from similarly contestatory fields of study, such as postcolonial theory, postcolonial feminism, and intersectional feminism. The article includes bibliographies of literary works that address secularism and postsecularism, including their intersection with postcoloniality.

Review (2), *Postcolonial Passages* (Dube, ed.), *Contributions to Indian Sociology*, by J Devika.pdf

This book brings together some of the most prominent work in contemporary history writing in India—overall, a rare treat. The offerings combine insights from various disciplines including history, anthropology, cultural studies and literary criticism. Deeply informed by anti-humanist thinking, they seek to challenge the image of an all-encompassing and omnipotent empire, nation or community. Saurabh Dube pays particular attention to the diversity of work in the field of postcolonial history writing in India. His perceptive introduction discusses the broader intellectual context marked by intensified transactions between history and anthropology, heightened questioning of the Eurocentric canon in the academy, and critical engagement with Continental philosophy within history and anthropology, in which questions ofcolonialism and the complicity of Western knowledge in it were foregrounded. The result was the rise of ‘cultural histories and historical ethnographies that carefully question and critically elaborate colonialism and nationalism, state and nation, and modernity and its margins’. These are also efforts to think self-reflexively ‘through the ambiguities and possibilities of the postcolonial as a category’.