During the past twenty years, the world’s most renowned critical
theorist—the scholar who defined the field of postcolonial
studies—has experienced a radical reorientation in her thinking.
Finding the neat polarities of tradition and modernity, colonial and
postcolonial, no longer sufficient for interpreting the globalized
present, she turns elsewhere to make her central argument: that
aesthetic education is the last available instrument for implementing
global justice and democracy. Spivak’s unwillingness to sacrifice
the ethical in the name of the aesthetic, or to sacrifice the
aesthetic in grappling with the political, makes her task formidable.
As she wrestles with these fraught relationships, she rewrites
Friedrich Schiller’s concept of play as double bind, reading Gregory
Bateson with Gramsci as she negotiates Immanuel Kant, while in
dialogue with her teacher Paul de Man. Among the concerns Spivak
addresses is this: Are we ready to forfeit the wealth of the world’s
languages in the name of global communication? “Even a good
globalization (the failed dream of socialism) requires the uniformity
which the diversity of mother-tongues must challenge,” Spivak
writes. “The tower of Babel is our refuge.” In essays on theory,
translation, Marxism, gender, and world literature, and on writers
such as Assia Djebar, J. M. Coetzee, and Rabindranath Tagore, Spivak
argues for the social urgency of the humanities and renews the case
for literary studies, imprisoned in the corporate university.
“Perhaps,” she writes, “the literary can still do something.”
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780674257931
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
Harvard University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter