Comparing Postcolonial Diasporas ebook
by M. Keown,D. Murphy,J. Procter
Comparing Postcolonial Diasporas. MICHELLE KEOWN is Senior Lecturer in English Literature at the University of Edinburgh, UK, specializing in postcolonial literature and theory, particularly that of the Pacific
Comparing Postcolonial Diasporas. MICHELLE KEOWN is Senior Lecturer in English Literature at the University of Edinburgh, UK, specializing in postcolonial literature and theory, particularly that of the Pacific. She has published widely on Maori, Pacific and New Zealand writing, and is the author of Postcolonial Pacific Writing: Representations of the Body (2005) and Pacific Islands Writing: The Postcolonial Literatures of Aotearoa/New Zealand and Oceania (2007). DAVID MURPHY is Professor of French at the University of Stirling, UK.
Contents Acknowledgements Notes on Contributors Introduction: Theorizing Postcolonial Diasporas- . eown, . urphy & . rocter PART ONE: DISCOVERING EUROPE European Tribes: Transnational Diasporic. FOR 'HOME' 'Naturally, I reject the term "diaspora"': Said and Palestinian Dispossession- . illiams Latin Americans in London and the Dynamics of Diasporic Identities- . oman-Velasquez Constructing the Metropolitan Homeland: The Literatures of the White Settler Societies of New Zealand and Australia- . ilson PART THREE: COMPARATIVE DIASPORIC CONTEXTS Exile, Incarceration and the Homeland
Michelle Keown, David Murphy, James Procter.
Michelle Keown, David Murphy, James Procter.
In book: Comparing Postcolonial Diasporas, p. -15. Pacific Islands Writing: The Postcolonial Literatures of Aotearoa. Cite this publication. Introduction: Pacific Diaspora? P Spickard. Yale French Studies, 103. Special issue: ‘French and Francophone: The Challenge of Expanding Horizons.
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In: Keown M, Murphy D & Procter J (ed. Comparing Postcolonial Diasporas. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 211-227. Abstract This essay examines depictions of migrant workers in French and British postcolonial cinema as transplanted interlopers, 'exotic' or transgendered bodies that are perceived as a threat to the integrity of the body politic
Introduction: Theorizing Postcolonial Diasporas. In M. Keown, D. Murphy, & J. Procter (Ed., Comparing Postcolonial Diasporas.
Introduction: Theorizing Postcolonial Diasporas. reproduced with permission of Palgrave Macmillan. own/?K 9780230547087.
Comparing Postcolonial Diasporas. Published by: englishcology (Karma: 4548. 82) on 3 January 2010 Views: 2443
Comparing Postcolonial Diasporas. 82) on 3 January 2010 Views: 2443.
David Murphy ‘Race, communism and anti-colonial politics in 1920s Paris: the case of Lamine Senghor’. David Murphy is Professor of French and Postcolonial Studies at the University of Stirling. He is the author of two monographs, Sembene: Imagining Alternatives in Film and Fiction (2000), and (with Patrick Williams) Postcolonial African Cinema: Ten Directors (2007), and he is currently completing a third on Senegalese anti-colonial militant Lamine Senghor.
