Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak
In Other Words
1. Auflage März 2009
160 Seiten, Softcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
ISBN:
978-1-4051-0318-3
John Wiley & Sons
This book introduces and discusses the works of leading feminist
postcolonialist Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, by exploring the key
concepts and themes to emerge from them.
* Focuses on the key themes to emerge from Spivak's work,
such as ethics, literature, feminism, pedagogy, postcoloniality,
violence, and war
* Assesses Spivak's often contentious relationship with
feminist and postcolonial studies
* Considers the significance of her work for other fields, such
as ethnography, history, cultural studies and philosophy
Acknowledgments.
1. Writing Autobiography, Writing Spivak: In Lieu of An
Introduction.
2. Reading Literature, Teaching Literature: Whither
Soulmaking?
3. Reading Singularity, Reading Difference: An Ethics of the
Impossible.
4. Reading Woman, Reading Essence: Whither Gender?
Bibliography.
Index.
1. Writing Autobiography, Writing Spivak: In Lieu of An
Introduction.
2. Reading Literature, Teaching Literature: Whither
Soulmaking?
3. Reading Singularity, Reading Difference: An Ethics of the
Impossible.
4. Reading Woman, Reading Essence: Whither Gender?
Bibliography.
Index.
"Overall, In Other Words represents an impressive effort by Ray to
link, compress but also carefully reread a wide swath of Spivak's
work. At times disorienting in its scope like the theorist's own
work, Ray's book offers a sustained engagement with some of
Spivak's most valuable insights and has me returning to her oeuvre
with fresh eyes." (Postcolonial Text, 2011)
link, compress but also carefully reread a wide swath of Spivak's
work. At times disorienting in its scope like the theorist's own
work, Ray's book offers a sustained engagement with some of
Spivak's most valuable insights and has me returning to her oeuvre
with fresh eyes." (Postcolonial Text, 2011)
Sangeeta Ray is Professor of English at the University of Maryland at College Park. She is the author of En-Gendering India: Woman and Nation in Colonial and Postcolonial Narratives (2000) and the co-editor of A Companion to Postcolonial Studies (Wiley-Blackwell, 2000).