Umbrella idea: postcolonialism = one canopy covering theories + texts + criticism about colonialism’s present-day afterlives.
Colonial = doesn’t challenge empire; Postcolonial = writes back to the imperial center.
Charter → Caribbean islands → Sugar plantations → Triangular trade → Middle Passage deaths.
Military + economic + religious/philosophical = the three engines; then: navy → colonies, and abolition comes in two steps (trade 1807, slavery 1834→1838).
1807 ends the trade; 1834 starts “apprenticeship”; 1838 ends slavery—while owners get paid, not the formerly enslaved.
1857 mutiny → social order breaks → Westernized classes → stronger Indian nationalism → Crown takes over (Raj).
Statute of Westminster = “Westminster can’t override”: dominions gain control over their own laws.
Wind of Change = Cape Town 1960 → fast African independence; Mau Mau = Kenya’s road to 1963.
Orientalism = “East as a timeless threat” made by texts; Otherness = “difference as a fixed binary” that ranks the West above it.
Achebe = “place” under pressure: missionaries + colonial courts = identity breaks like a clan’s map being redrawn.
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 1980s | Post(-)colonial studies/literatures/criticism begins as a distinct field of study and research |
| 1584 | Elizabeth I grants Sir Walter Raleigh a royal charter to explore, colonize, and rule specified lands |
| 1807 | Slave Trade Act abolishes the slave trade in the British Empire |
| 1834 | Slavery Abolition Act ends slavery in the British Empire and introduces a transition period |
| 1838 | Emancipation is linked to the end of the apprenticeship transition |
| 1857 | Indian Rebellion of 1857 against British rule |
| 1960 | Wind of Change speech (Cape Town) predicts rapid decolonization across Africa |
| 1975 | Achebe delivers “An Image of Africa: Racism in Conrad’s Heart of Darkness” |
| 1958 | West Indies Federation is established |
| 1962 | West Indies Federation collapses |
Postcolonial vs colonial writing
| Term | Time frame | Typical stance |
|---|---|---|
| Postcolonial literature | From the moment of colonization to the present day | Reflects effects of colonialism; writers often react against/respond to imperial narratives |
| Colonial literature | Works written during the British Empire (16th-20th centuries) | Concerned with colonization/colonialism but does not challenge it; often supports/justifies it as part of broader colonial discourse |
Teste seu conhecimento sobre Understanding Postcolonialism and Colonial Legacies com 10 perguntas de múltipla escolha com correções detalhadas.
1. What most directly helped drive British imperial expansion in the Atlantic?
2. What was a major effect of the Statute of Westminster 1931?
Memorize os conceitos chave de Understanding Postcolonialism and Colonial Legacies com 20 flashcards interativos.
Postcolonialism — definition?
An umbrella field studying colonialism’s effects today.
Postcolonial studies — focus?
Academic research on colonialism’s past and present impacts.
Postcolonial literature(s) — role?
Creative writings related to colonial experiences.
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