Dialogics of the Oppressed

الغلاف الأمامي
U of Minnesota Press - 244 من الصفحات

Dialogics of the Oppressed was first published in 1992. Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press editions.

Formulated within and against the context of Russian formalism that became the backbone of semiotics, Mikhail Bakhtin's work has enabled contemporary critical theories to return to specific sociopolitical and historical moments that had been closed off by formalist abstractions. In Dialogics of the Oppressed, Peter Hitchcock looks through the lens of Bakhtin's theory of dialogism for an analysis of subaltern writing. Rather than assume an integral "subaltern subject" as the object of analysis, Hitchcock - in case studies of four global feminists, Nawal el Saadawi, Pat Barker, Zhang Jie, and Agnes Smedley - emphasizes the cultural agency of the subaltern and shows the political implications this agency might have for literary analysis in general and cultural studies in particular.

"Presents a provocative set of readings-through the Bakhtinian model of dialogism-of texts by four women writers of the twentieth century. . . instructive and compelling." Barbara Harlow, University of Texas

Dialogics of the Oppressed argues from an internationalistic perspective to underline that the heterogeneity of dialogic feminism itself constitutes a significant array of discursive resistance to the hegemony of disciplines and so-called area studies operative in the metropolitan First World academy. Hitchcock demonstrates through dialogic analyses of the writings of these four feminists that a form of multicultural materialism can itself disrupt the restrictive logics and practices of literary studies in the Western academy, and that indeed, there is a counterlogic in the culture of the subaltern. Hitchcock's underlying objective is the development of a powerful critique of the epistemological bases of the academy that marginalize and devalorize certain cultural productions and subjects, as well as a cognitive mapping of the politics of pedagogy in current transformations of disciplinarity.

Peter Hitchcock is professor of English at Baruch College of the City University of New York. He is the author of Working-Class Fiction in Theory and Practice and has published essays on radical writing, multiculturalism, film, and Third World fiction.

 

المحتوى

Theorizing the Subaltern Subject
1
2 Firdaus or The Politics of Positioning
25
3 Radical Writing
53
4 The Ark of Desire
83
5 The Other Agnes
128
6 Translation Relations
170
Notes
203
Selected Bibliography
229
Index
239
حقوق النشر

طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات

عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة

نبذة عن المؤلف

Peter Hitchcock (Professor, Baruch College and the Graduate School) has taught in CUNY since 1988. He has been a Visiting Professor at SUNY Stony Brook, Beijing University, and Shanghai University. He studies literary and cultural theory, twentieth century film and literature (American, European, Asian, and African), and the work ofMikhail Bakhtin. He is the author of four books: Working-Class Fiction in Theory and Practice; Dialogics of the Oppressed; Oscillate Wildly: Space, Body, and Spirit of Millennial Materialism; and Imaginary States: Studies in Cultural Transnationalism (forthcoming, Illinois). He has edited and introduced a special issue of South Atlantic Quarterly on Mikhail Bakhtin and is on the editorial boards of Dialogism and Cultural Logic. He has published around fifty articles in journals such as Modern Fiction Studies, Transition, Third Text, Rethinking Marxism, Research in African Literatures, Women's Studies Quarterly, Cultural Studies, Theory, Culture and Society, Twentieth Century Literature, as well as in a number of anthologies.

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