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After Orientalism: Culture, Criticism, and Politics in the Third World
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 June 2009
Extract
Over the last decade, studies of ‘third world’ histories and cultures have come to draw to a very considerable extent upon the theoretical perspectives provided by poststructuralism and postmodernism. With the publication in 1978 of Edward Said's work, Orientalism, these perspectives—now fused and extended into a distinctive amalgam of cultural critique, Foucauldian approaches to power, engaged ‘politics of difference,’ and postmodernist emphases on the decentered and the heterogeneous—began to be appropriated in a major way for the study of non-European histories and cultures. Certainly in our own field of Indian colonial history, Said's characteristic blending of these themes has now become virtually a paradigm for a new generation of historians and anthropologists. These directions have been most recently and sharply endorsed in Gyan Prakash's discussion, ‘Writing Post-Orientalist Histories of the Third World: Perspectives from Indian Historiography.’
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References
We would like to Ihank Ajay Skaria, Crispin Bates, Saurabh Dube. David Ludden, Fred Reid, and Burt Stein for their reading and comments on this paper.
1 Prakash, Gyan, “Writing Post-Orientalist Histories of the Third World: Perspectives from Indian Historiography,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 32:2 (04 1990), 383—408.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
2 Ibid., 390.
3 Ibid., 397.
4 Ibid., 399.
5 Ibid., 398.
6 Ibid., 401.
7 Ibid., 404.
8 Ibid., 406.
9 Ibid., 400.
10 Ibid., 404–5.
11 Ibid., 405.
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13 Prakash's notion of what constitutes Marxist history is problematic, for neither of the two examples which he provides fall easily into the category. The first, concerning Bengali histories of the Bengali renaissance would seem most influenced by Bengali nationalist ideology, as it is not clear why Bengal's failure to generate a secular rationalist culture and a bourgeois social order prior to the development of industrial capitalism is a problem for Marxism. The second, concerning usage of Andre Gunder Frank's concept of underdevelopment, also ill fits the category, for the concept derives from neo-Smithian rather than Marxist economic theory: see Brenner, R., “The Origins of Capitalist Development: A Critique of Neo-Smithian Marxism,” New Left Review, 104:4 (1977), 25–92.Google Scholar
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59 Ibid., 51.
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62 Ibid., 51.
63 Ibid., 52.
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