Fr. 52.50

Subaltern Silence - A Postcolonial Genealogy

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Subordination did not simply fade away in the aftermath of colonialism. Instead, this illuminating book shows, a host of subtle new techniques have arisen that dominate vast categories of people by rendering them silent.

List of contents

Acknowledgments
Part I. Innovations in Subordination: Colonial Public Spheres
1. The Sounds of Silence
2. Silence as an Achievement: Marronage
3. Unsettling Silences: The Perils of Poison
4. Phantasmatic Public Spheres: The Paranoid Style in French Colonialism
5. Disruptive Object: The Tricolor Cockade and the Fear of Black Jacobins
Interlude. The Shifting Horizon of Modernity: Placide Camus, Apprentice Printer
Part II. Postcolonial Transformations
6. Times of Exception: Subaltern Silence in the Revolutionary Caribbean
7. Revolution Within a Revolution: Postcolonial Liberalism and the Army of Sufferers
8. The Force of Farce: Emperor Soulouque and the Art of Racial Caricature
9. Silent in Plain Sight: We are All Postcolonial Now
Notes
Bibliography
Index

About the author

Kevin Olson is professor of political science at the University of California, Irvine. He is the author of Imagined Sovereignties: The Power of the People and Other Myths of the Modern Age (2016) and Reflexive Democracy: Political Equality and the Welfare State (2006) and the editor of Adding Insult to Injury: Nancy Fraser Debates Her Critics (2008).

Summary

Subordination did not simply fade away in the aftermath of colonialism. Instead, this illuminating book shows, a host of subtle new techniques have arisen that dominate vast categories of people by rendering them silent. Kevin Olson investigates how contemporary societies silence the subaltern: sometimes a literal silencing, often a metaphor for other ways of making people unheard. Such forms of silence make some people invisible, push others to the margins, and devalue the voices and actions of still others.

Subaltern Silence traces the development of these techniques to the early years of European colonialism, focusing on Haiti’s revolution and postcolonial trajectory. Exploring rich archives from Europe and the postcolonial world, Olson critiques fundamental modern institutions and technologies, such as the public sphere, the free press, and even progressively minded democratic revolution, as sites of exclusion. With the emergence of postcoloniality, he argues, subordination has become increasingly abstract, virtual, and symbolic. Nonetheless, it lies at the heart of contemporary racial politics, divides Global South from Global North, and allocates privileges and burdens in ways that are often scarcely perceptible. Engaging deeply with the thought of Gayatri Spivak and Michel Foucault, Subaltern Silence offers a new genealogy of colonialism and postcoloniality that is both historically informed and theoretically rich.

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