Introduction: Singular or specific?
1. Postcolonial theory
2. Edouard Glissant: from nation to Relation
3. Charles Johnson and the transcendence of place
4. Mohammed Dib and the 'alarm al-mithral: between the singular and
the specific
5. Severo Sarduy: sunyata and beyond
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Peter Hallward is Professor Of Modern European Philosophy at Kingston University, London, and is the author of Subject to Truth: The Philosophy of Alain Badiou (2002)
A brilliant refusal of its established terms of engagement, this
book marks a major advance in thinkin g through and beyond
postcolonial theory., Diana Brydon, Professor of English,
University of Western Ontario|Peter Hallward's book is perhaps the
key theoretico-political intervention of the last decade – one of
those few where one cannot but exclaim: 'Finally the word we were
all secretly waiting for!' One can only hope that his critique of
postcolonial theory will set in motion the much-delayed liberation
of teh academic Left from the postmodern jargon which has long
dominated cultural studies. If ever a book was a weapon, this is
it!, Slavoj Žižek, Institute for Social Studies, Ljubljana|This
monumental study transforms the terms within which critical
understanding of postcolonial culture has been conducted. Lucid,
difficult, highly original and sometimes contentious, Hallward's
stimulating book provides a new bench-mark for all future debate in
this field., Paul Gilroy, Professor of Sociology and African
American Studies, Yale University|Bringing a real philosophical
intelligence to bear on the field, this extremely important book is
a singular intervention in every sense of the word., Keith Ansell
Pearson, Professor of Philosophy, University of Warwick
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