During the past two decades, postcolonial studies has proven to be one of the fastest growing fields of critical inquiry. Postcolonialism has established itself as an important specialist field within literature disciplines, and it has strong resonances across other disciplines (history, sociology, anthropology, geography, cultural studies) and is a field which has inspired genuinely interdisciplinary research. These essays, collected from the journal ARIEL (A Review of International English Literataure), take up some of the most pressing issues in postcolonial debates: the challenges which new theories of globalization present for postcolonial studies, the difficulties of rethinking how "marginality" might be defined in a new globalized world, the problems of imagining social transformation within globalization. The editors' goal in bringing together this collection of articles is not to provide any definitive statement on these urgent questions; rather, it is to assemble a group of essays which "think through" the issues and which therefore has the potential to move the discipline forward. The contributors represented include a balance of senior scholars with international reputations and scholars who represent the next generation.
With Contributions By: Bill Ashcroft Rey Chow Rob Cover Wendy Faith Monika Fludernik Revathi Krishnaswamy Mary Lawlor Victor Li Pamela McCallum Vijay Mishra Wang Ning Kalpana Sheshadri-Crooks
Pamela McCallum is a Professor of English at the University of Calgary.
Wendy Faith is currently pursuing PhD studies in the Department of English at the University of Calgary.
With Contributions By: Pamela McCaullum, Wendy Faith, Rey Chow, Rob Cover, Monika Flundernick, Revathi Krishnaswamy, Vijay Mishra, Kalpana Sheshadri-Crooks, Mary Lawlor, Bill Ashcroft, Victor Li, and Wang Ning
McCallum and Faith offer a glimpse of what a globalized post-colonial studies might look like . . . [Their] volume fulfills the promise of its title.
—Lily Cho, University of Toronto Quarterly