What Comes After Postcolonial Theory?

This essay explores possible paths after postcolonial theory, with the after understood not as a negation, but as a form of inheritance and the creation of routes, such that an aftermath need not have a resentful or self-hating relation and nor simply an acceptance of given pictures of "western...

Full description

Saved in:  
Bibliographic Details
Subtitles:"Special Issue on Steps to a Global Thought: Thinking from Elsewhere (pp. 411–611)"
Main Author: Singh, Bhrigupati (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
Check availability: HBZ Gateway
Journals Online & Print:
Drawer...
Fernleihe:Fernleihe für die Fachinformationsdienste
Published: Springer Netherlands 2023
In: Sophia
Year: 2023, Volume: 62, Issue: 3, Pages: 577-606
Further subjects:B Postcolonial Theory
B Ramayana
B Stanley Cavell
B Global humanities
B Romanticism
B Political theologies
Online Access: Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
Description
Summary:This essay explores possible paths after postcolonial theory, with the after understood not as a negation, but as a form of inheritance and the creation of routes, such that an aftermath need not have a resentful or self-hating relation and nor simply an acceptance of given pictures of "western" thought. The route explored here is neither fully secular nor religious, and nor from a radically alternative ontology, but rather prompted by three enduring concerns within the global humanities, explored in three sections of this paper. The first section "Political Theologies as an Alternative to the Dichotomy of Religion and Secularism", asks what the difference and proximity between theology and theory may be, if we acknowledge the at times less visible theological genealogies of "secular" social and critical theory. Rather than taking such genealogies only to be an effect of Eurocentrism, or as the lasting hegemony of Protestant Christian assumptions, we examine other ways of navigating tentative movements across ontological borders. The second section, "Theory as Darsan (Pilgrimage/Path/School)" suggests that rather than thinking of concepts as anchored entirely to given territories or identities or as tools of "generalization", we might place the word theory in relation to its genealogical kin, theos and theoria/darsan, as the formation of contemplative styles that emerge through forms of recurrent journeying within and across territories, following the tracks of others. As an instance of such journeying, we focus on a particular thinker, Stanley Cavell, whose writing suggests ways of remapping geographies of thought, in ways that could be significant for global thought, across so-called western and non-western territories. How might such journeys be continued? Section 3: "A Darsan: the Killing of Birds, Some Centuries Apart" offers one such journey, three minor coordinates of a world map, located in three poetically enshrined bird killings, in Valmiki's Ramayana, in Coleridge's Rime of the Ancient Mariner, and in Richard Power's The Echo Maker, each of which incants a curse of unsettlement, and a fault line in relation to being human. This article hopes to contribute to debates on decolonization, currently underway in universities across the world, and seeks to offer a possible alternative to static conceptions of west and non-west.
ISSN:1873-930X
Contains:Enthalten in: Sophia
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1007/s11841-023-00964-1