Decolonising Gender: Literature and a Poetics of the RealThrough examination of the functions of language and cross-cultural readings of literature – from African queer reading to postcolonial Shakespeare – Rooney explores the nature of the real, providing:
Exploring current ideas of performativity in literature and language, and negotiating a path between feminist theory’s common pitfalls of essentialism and constructivism, Caroline Rooney argues convincingly that by rethinking our understanding of gender we might also equip ourselves to resist racism and totalitarianism more effectively. |
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... Novel National and cosmopolitan narratives in English Neelam Srivastava 18 English Writing and India, 1600-1920 Colonizing aesthetics Pramod K. Nayar 19 Decolonising Gender Literature and a poetics of the real Caroline Rooney 20 ...
... Novel National and cosmopolitan narratives in English Neelam Srivastava 18 English Writing and India, 1600-1920 Colonizing aesthetics Pramod K. Nayar 19 Decolonising Gender Literature and a poetics of the real Caroline Rooney 20 ...
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... novel; it requires you to learn a massive vocabulary. But – and here is the wonder of it – you do not need to learn a new way of thinking. There is no fancy physics, no chaos theory or quantum dynamics, no novelties. Like the discovery ...
... novel; it requires you to learn a massive vocabulary. But – and here is the wonder of it – you do not need to learn a new way of thinking. There is no fancy physics, no chaos theory or quantum dynamics, no novelties. Like the discovery ...
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... novel The Well of Loneliness (1928) and Virginia Woolf's Orlando (1928). In Hall's text the heroine as hero is a woman called Stephen Gordon who, believing in the superiority of the masculine, identifies herself with the male sex and ...
... novel The Well of Loneliness (1928) and Virginia Woolf's Orlando (1928). In Hall's text the heroine as hero is a woman called Stephen Gordon who, believing in the superiority of the masculine, identifies herself with the male sex and ...
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Contents
From monstrosity and technoperformativity to sumud 13 | |
Radiance or brilliance 75 | |
the philosophical type 93 | |
women of Zimbabwe 126 | |
Shakespeare the shaman 162 | |
a conclusion 190 | |
Notes 218 | |
Index 234 | |
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Common terms and phrases
African Antigone Antigone’s Claim appear Asada Austin Barthes become Butler capitalism ch’i chapter Chavafambira colonised commodity concerns consciousness creativity critique culture Dangarembga David Bohm death deconstruction desire difference Enlightenment essay ethics father feel feminine fiction Foucault freedom of spirit Freud Fumbatha further references gender ghost ghostly Hamlet Hegel Hillis Miller human iterability Jacques Derrida Judith Butler Kant Kant’s kwela labour Lacan Laertes language literature living London machine Mahmoud Darwish maintains Mannoni masculine matter mystical Negri novel Olimpia ontological Ophelia Oxford paternal performative perhaps pertains Phephelaphi philosophical play poem poetic poetic realism poetry political Postcolonial question radiance reading realisation reality Regarding ribbon Routledge Sandman seems sense serves sexual Shakespeare significance social speaks Specters of Marx speech act Spinoza Spivak stake story Tambu temporal theory thing trans Tsitsi Dangarembga unhu University Press Vera’s whilst woman women words writing Yvonne Vera Zimbabwe