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Humanism after Colonialism

by Claudia Alvares (Author)
©2006 Monographs 320 Pages

Summary

This study provides a wide-ranging critique of contemporary anti-humanist postcolonial theory. By charting a genealogy of the complicity of humanism and oppression in the New World, this analysis highlights the process of consolidation of a racialised, autonomous and rational modern subject as well as the existence of a fractured modernity. Situating contemporary Derridean critiques of humanism within the Hegelian tradition, this work demonstrates that post-modern anti-essentialism does not succeed in escaping totalisation. Furthermore, it contextualises the fractured modernity of the Western humanist tradition in relation to the works of key twentieth-century thinkers such as Frantz Fanon, Hannah Arendt and Emmanuel Levinas, arguing that these authors problematise the common reduction of humanism to a totalising outlook, due to their revelation of the gaps and fissures prevalent in the modern. Combining insights drawn from Fanon’s emphasis on lived experience, Arendt’s enlarged mentality and Levinas’s non-ontological transcendence, this study aims to deconstruct the complicity between humanism and colonialism.

Details

Pages
320
Year
2006
ISBN (Softcover)
9783039102549
Language
English
Keywords
Humanismus Moderne Postkolonialismus Humanism Post-Colonialism Discrimination Political Equality Slavery
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Wien, 2006. 320 pp.

Biographical notes

Claudia Alvares (Author)

The Author: Claudia Alvares obtained her Ph.D. from Goldsmith’s College, University of London, in June 2001. She is currently Associate Professor in Culture and Communication at the Communication and Information Department of Lusofona University, Lisbon, Portugal.

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Title: Humanism after Colonialism