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Empire, the National, and the Postcolonial, 1890-1920 : Resistance in Interaction

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"Empire, the National, and the Postcolonial", 1890-1920 explores the political co-operations and textual connections, which linked anti-colonial, nationalist, and modernist groups and individuals in the empire in the years 1890-1920.

By developing the key motifs of lateral interaction and colonial interdiscursivity, Boehmer builds a picture of the imperial world as an intricate network of surprising contacts and margin-to-margin interrelationships, and of modernism as a far more constellated cultural phenomenon than previously understood.

Individual case studies consider Irish support for the Boers in 1899-1902, the path-breaking radical partnership of the English woman Sister Nivedita and the Bengali extremist Aurobindo Ghose, Sol Plaatje's conflicted South African nationalism, and the cross-border, cosmopolitan involvements of W B Yeats, Rabindranath Tagore, and Leonard Woolf.

Underlining Frantz Fanon's perception that 'a colonized people is not alone', Boehmer significantly questions prevailing postcolonial paradigms of the self-defining nation, syncretism and mimicry, and dismantles still-dominant binary definitions of the colonial relationship.

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Product Details
Oxford University Press
019818445X / 9780198184454
Paperback / softback
06/01/2005
United Kingdom
English
250 p.
22 cm
research & professional Learn More
Reprint. Originally published: 2002.