Research note. Cultural Identity and the Trauma of the Colonial Experience. (original) (raw)

2014, Socialist Studies 10(1), 200-204

For some Marxists, issues of culture, identity and representation are secondary. In this research note, I analytically reflect on Stuart Hall's (1996) canonical essay "Cultural Identity and Diaspora," which stresses that these are significant concerns for anyone struggling for liberation. In his essay, Hall explicates two definitions of "cultural identity." The first is an essentialist identity, which emphasizes the similarities amongst a group of people. Hall argues that this definition can and does inspire feminist, anti-colonial and anti-racist art and activism, but cannot help us comprehend the trauma of colonialism. The second definition emphasizes the similarities and the differences amongst an imagined cultural group. Hall asserts that this definition is useful for understanding the trauma of colonialism because it emphasizes the historical and social contingency of identity. By using this definition in our analysis of power and normalization, we are better able to scrutinize historical and contemporary colonial relations and to struggle against them.

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A POST-COLONIAL REINTERPRETATION OF IDENTITY IN THE CONTEMPORARY WORLD

Research Inspiration, 2016

BSTRACT The aim of this paper is to investigate into the deliberate attempts made by the colonial masters for the suppression and victimization of the colonized world. There occurs an emergence of resisting power in the mind of the colonized that in a stepwise protest leads to certain reclaiming of lost status. Different scholars paved the way for this revolution espacially, A.D.Cesaire, F.O.Fanon, Edward Said, Homi K.Bhaba and others. The militant cries of Cesaire and Fanon resonates in African postcolonial context. The perplexed discoveries related to colonial conspiracy against Asian ethno cultural legacy by Edward Said fully accelerated the scholarly class of suppressed societies. Homi K.Bhabha openly challenges the set status of the colonizer and the colonized; this wins the lost identity of all the suppressed class of the world. Therefore, they, with their scholastic efforts, exposed the colonial discourse of exploitation and cultural invasion. Their efforts paved the way for protest literature in Africa, India and in many other previously occupied nations. Rereading and reinterpreting of some colonial text in a deconstructive perspective proves physical and psychological enslaving of colonized done by colonizer. Manipulating some situated conditions like diaspora and globalization, they want to prove their pretentious goodwill for other world. The close contact of coloniser-colonised or master/slave binaries effaces the so-called essential differences amongst them. This elevates the identity of colonized to his/her self-respect and power of claiming human status. Hence, we can say that lot of struggle has been done to assert human rights in the contemporary world. But there are still numberless communities that exist under the threat of some dictatorial authorities. The ill practices of powerful people transfers from colonial masters to some other power hungry people. Even in independent nations, many sections of society are living under the crual clutches of politicians, beaurocrates and other rich class people. Post-colonialism is one of the significant aspects of contemporary literature. It aims at evaluating the implications of colonial rule across the world. Colonization not only reshaped the political map of the world, but affected the social and cultural values of many nations. During and after the end of colonization, racial and socio-cultural critics began to assess its impact on the subject communities. It founded the basis of post-colonial studies.

A LIAISON OF IDENTITY CRISIS WITH COLONIAL INVASION AS PERPETUATED IN POST-COLONIAL LITERATURE

Abstract The evident connotation of the term post-colonial is that it attributes to an era coming after the end of colonialism. The remnants of colonialism can still be perceived in the postcolonial period, for colonialism unleashed an immense wound on the psychology, culture and identity of the once conquered people. This congregation of completely diverse cultures in the colonial period led to a great identity crisis in the postcolonial age. The contemporary situation of the once colonized people is an amalgamation of cross-cultural influences, mingled, patch-worked, and stratified upon one another. Hence, the postcolonial era has developed into a combat zone where the indigenous and the colonizer identify fight with each other to retrieve their allocated share in the novel cultural space. Keywords: Postcolonial, Colonialism, Psychology, Indigenous

Political and Cultural Identity in the Global Postcolony: Postcolonial Thinkers on the Racist Enlightenment and the Struggle for Humanity”. Acta Politologica. Vol. 9, no. 1, pp. 31-44

This paper investigates how, in the condition of postcolonialism, claims of political and cultural identity depend on the understanding of humanity, and how this understanding ultimately relates to historical agency. I understand postcolonialism as the condition that aims at the decolonization of thought of formerly colonized and former colonizers together – a condition that is global. I will construe my argument by discussing the following au- thors: Frantz Fanon, Emmanuel Chukwudi Eze, Amilcar Cabral, Achille Mbembe and Michael Onyebuchi Eze. Fanon for his criticism of modern Western philosophy as dehumanizing the other; Emmanuel Eze for his in-depth critique of Kant and Hegel’s ideas of humanity and the racialised and racist frames of thought they left behind and both Fanon and Eze for their proposals to understand humanity as a project under construction; Amilcar Cabral for his views on the interrelatedness of political and cultural identity in a situation of the building of new nations. Achille Mbembe because he showed the relations between the former colo- nizers and the formerly colonized to be characterized by conflicting temporalizations and Michael Eze for his understanding of historical agency in the condition of postcolonialism. Through this discussion I will disentangle the relations between identity (political and cultural) and humanity in the postcolony, and arrive, after a critique of the racist Enlightenment, at an inclusive, instead of an exclusive, understanding of humanity and historical agency

ISSUE OF IDENTITY IN THE POSTCOLONIAL WORLD

Scholarly Research Journal for Humanity Science & English Language, 2022

This research will explore the issue of identity in postcolonial literature. In the modern world with the increase in immigrant numbers, hybrid nations, and the constitution of countries with different cultural diversities the question of identity came to the surface. The research will present and discuss those theorists' arguments about the issue of identity in the postcolonial world and how they viewed and presented their ideas about constructing identity in former colonized countries and immigrants from these countries who suffered from facing the diasporas and the dilemma of the difficulty to construct their identity. The paper will investigate postcolonial novelists, especially writers in former British colonies such as V.S. Naipaul, Sam Selvon, and Tayeb Salih. As postcolonial theorists considered the issue of identity as one of its essential discussions, novelists also exposed and expressed the conditions of identity crises that emerged in the post-colonial period. The method will undertake to apply postcolonial theories to the works of the above-mentioned novelists.

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