Results 181 to 190 of about 294 (217)

Rethinking ‘Hill‐Valley Divide’ in Darjeeling District, India: An Autoethnographic Approach to Highland Identities

open access: yesStudies in Ethnicity and Nationalism, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT This research examines the Hill‐Valley divide in Darjeeling district, West Bengal, India, where Nepali‐speaking hill communities coexist with Bengali‐speaking valley populations. It argues that this division is a colonial construct, shaped by British policies that romanticised the hills as a ‘mini‐England’ while separating them from the valley
Yalember Dewan
wiley   +1 more source

What's Hard Is Yet to Come: Critical Junctures and Changing Gender Beliefs at the Transition From College to Career

open access: yesSociological Forum, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Drawing on 71 interviews with 20 respondents across four waves before and after their graduation, we explore whether and how the transition from college to career can lead to new experiences with and understandings of gender inequality for elite graduates of color. While all respondents experienced or witnessed gender inequality and recognized
Emily K. Carian, Amy L. Johnson
wiley   +1 more source

The Scholar Imprisoned: Young‐Bok Shin's Decolonial Thought Against (Sub) Imperialisms in East Asia

open access: yesSociological Forum, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT This article reads Young‐Bok Shin (1941–2016) as a decolonial thinker who theorized transformative worldmaking from the standpoint of the oppressed, rooted in the historical experiences of East Asia. Against the (sub)imperial “logic of sameness” that structures colonial modernity in his social world, Shin advances gongbu (studying) as a ...
Veda Hyunjin Kim
wiley   +1 more source

The Dismal Harvest: The Uneven Landscapes of AI in Agriculture

open access: yesTransactions of the Institute of British Geographers, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT In this intervention, I examine artificial intelligence (AI) in agriculture through a political ecology lens, analysing how promises of productivity, efficiency, and sustainability take shape across uneven postcolonial landscapes. Building on feminist and critical agrarian perspectives, I focus on the material relations of farming to show that
Katarzyna Cieslik
wiley   +1 more source
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Postcolonialism and ‘postcolonialism’

Interventions, 1998
(1998). Postcolonialism and ‘postcolonialism’. Interventions: Vol. 1, Ideologies of the Postcolonial, pp. 24-26.
openaire   +1 more source

Postcolonialism — Or postcolonial studies

Interventions, 1998
(1998). Postcolonialism — Or postcolonial studies. Interventions: Vol. 1, Ideologies of the Postcolonial, pp. 39-42.
openaire   +1 more source

Postcolonial Locations

2020
Postcolonial Locations seeks to clarify the meaning of ‘the postcolonial’ through close textual readings, and prioritises material and located readings over more abstract theoretical discussions; it seeks to re-orient the field by providing practical explorations of what the discipline is for. The book begins with an introduction of the key theoretical
Spencer, Robert   +1 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Postcolonialism

Abstract The term “postcolonialism” suggests a cohesive outlook as though it had a definite chronology and a clearly demarcated inside and outside. In fact, it has neither, and should not be confused with “postcolonial studies”—a broader, more non-denominational response to Eurocentrism.
Michael Hatt, Charlotte Klonk
  +5 more sources

understanding postcolonialism

2009
Postcolonialism offers challenging and provocative ways of thinking about colonial and neocolonial power, about self and other, and about the discourses that perpetuate postcolonial inequality and violence. Much of the seminal work in postcolonialism has been shaped by currents in philosophy, notably Marxism and ethics.
openaire   +1 more source

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