Lexington Books
Pages: 346
Trim: 6½ x 9⅜
978-0-7391-1667-8 • Hardback • May 2007 • $179.00 • (£138.00)
978-0-7391-1668-5 • Paperback • December 2007 • $66.99 • (£52.00)
978-0-7391-5935-4 • eBook • May 2007 • $63.50 • (£49.00)
Nalini Persram teaches Social and Political Thought at York University, Toronto. She has taught at Trinity College, Dublin and the University of the West Indies, and her areas of intererest include subjectivity and survival, Caribbean forms of culture and resistance, and other sites of political theory.
1 Introduction: Pushing Politics
Part 2 Part One: Imperialism and Political Thought
Chapter 3 Alterity and Modernity (Las Casa, Vitoria and Suárez: 1514-1617)
Chapter 4 Ibn Khaldun and the Origins of State Politics
Chapter 5 From American Democracy to French Empire: Race and the Law in Tocqueville's Liberalism
Chapter 5 Power and Development: John Stuart Mill and Edmund Burke on Empire
Part 7 Part Two: Critical Diagnostics and Newness
Chapter 8 Problematic People and Epistemic Decolonization: Toward the Postcolonial in Africana Political Thought
Chapter 8 Postcolonial Dialogics: Between Edward Said and Antonio Gramsci
Chapter 9 The Gift of Double Consciousness: Some Obstacles to Grasping the Contributions of the Colonized
Chapter 10 Symptomatic Politics: The Banning of Islamic Head Scarves in French PUblic Schools
Chapter 12 Edouard Glissant's Aesthetics of Relation as Diversality and Creolization
Chapter 13 From Post-Colonial to Post-Occidental Paradigm: Indigenous Peoples' Mobilization and the Advancement of New Scholarship
Part 13 Part Three: Indigenous Movements of the Postcolonial
Chapter 15 Doing the Postcolonial Differently
Chapter 16 Postcolonial Dialogues and Public Cyberspace: Pacific Insights for Cynical Times