The Postcolonial Subject: Claiming Politics/Governing Others In Late Modernity

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This book places the lens on postcolonial agency and resistance in a social and geopolitical context that has witnessed great transformations in international politics. What does postcolonial politics mean in a late modern context of interventions that seek to govern postcolonial populations? Drawing on historic and contemporary articulations of agency and resistance and highlighting voices from the postcolonial world, the book explores the transition from colonial modernity to the late modern postcolonial era. It shows that at each moment wherein the claim to politics is made, the postcolonial subject comes face to face with global operations of power that seek to control and govern. As seen in the Middle East and elsewhere, these operations have variously drawn on war, policing, as well as pedagogical practices geared at governing the political aspirations of target societies. The book provides a conceptualisation of postcolonial political subjectivity, discusses moments of its emergence, and exposes the security agendas that seek to govern it. Engaging with political thought, from Hannah Arendt, to Frantz Fanon, Michel Foucault, and Edward Said, among other critical and postcolonial theorists, and drawing on art, literature, and film from the postcolonial world, this work will be of great interest to students and scholars of critical international relations, postcolonial theory, and political theory.

Author(s): Vivienne Jabri
Series: Interventions
Edition: 1
Publisher: Routledge | Taylor & Francis Group
Year: 2013

Language: English
Commentary: TruePDF | Full TOC
Pages: 201
Tags: Politics And Government; Postcolonialism

Cover
Title
Copyright
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction | The past in the present
1 | Tracing the postcolonial subject
An epistemological quest for the postcolonial subject
On temporal trajectories
The spatial and the postcolonial
2 | Policing access to the modern: power, fear, resistance
Narratives of resistance
Culture and the politics of control
Counter-insurgency: violence, fear, anxiety
3 | Resistance as the claim to politics
Claiming the right to politics
Locating the subject of politics
Fanon’s negativity
Claiming the international
Tracing the postcolonial subject into late modernity
4 | Reclaiming the international: resistance in cosmopolitan space
Declaring independence, claiming the right to (international) politics
Political community and the postcolonial state
The postcolonial state, resistance, and the international
5 | Governing others: war and operations of power in late modernity
When power is rendered cosmopolitan
Liberal cosmopolitanism and the government of populations
Violence and the government of populations
6 | Creative politics and postcolonial agency
The question of postcolonial agency
The late modern postcolonial
Claiming the political in late modernity: the Arab Spring
A cosmopolitanism of politics
Notes
Bibliography
Index