Fr. 66.00

Postcolonial Europe

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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This book presents an overview of the direct and indirect ways in which Europe continues to be influenced by its entrenched postcolonial condition. Exploring the notion of postcolonial Europe as it characterises a Europe caught at a number of crossroads, it considers the distinctly European features of a range of global crises by which Europe is beset, relating to migration, nationalism, internationalism, climate change and inequality. Linking these to the legacy of European hegemony during the era of high imperialism and the inability to come to terms with the region's increasingly provincialised status, the reversal of migrant flows following the implosion of European empires, and the dismantling of welfare societies initially made possible by the accumulation of wealth during colonialism, the author examines the gradual disintegration of the idea of the European collectivity and the erosion of the idea that Europe is a dispenser of privileged status. A wide-ranging study of Europe's crisis in its postcolonial era, this volume will appeal to scholars of critical sociology, political geography, cultural studies, anthropology, political science and history with interests in colonialism and postcolonialism.

List of contents










Introduction 1. Historicising postcolonial Europe 2. Postcolonial Europe regionalised 3. The nation-empires and their legacy 4. Postcolonial Europe in the time of crisis


About the author










Lars Jensen is Associate Professor at Cultural Encounters in the Department of Communication and Arts, at Roskilde University, Denmark. He is the author of Postcolonial Denmark: Nation Narration in a Crisis Ridden Europe and co-editor of Postcolonial Europe: Comparative Reflections after the Empires, Crisis in the Nordic Countries and Beyond and Whiteness and Postcolonialism in the Nordic Region.


Summary

This book presents an overview of the direct and indirect ways in which Europe continues to be influenced by its entrenched postcolonial condition, considering the distinctly European features of a range of global crises by which Europe is beset, relating to migration, nationalism, internationalism, climate change and inequality.

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