Title Information
Title
Globalism, Humanitarianism, and the Body in Postcolonial Literature
Name: Personal
Name Part
Ettensohn, Derek M
Role
Role Term: Text
creator
Origin Information
Copyright Date
2014
Physical Description
Extent
viii, 266 p.
digitalOrigin
born digital
Note
Thesis (Ph.D. -- Brown University (2014)
Name: Personal
Name Part
George, Olakunle
Role
Role Term: Text
Director
Name: Personal
Name Part
Bewes, Timothy
Role
Role Term: Text
Reader
Name: Personal
Name Part
Reichman, Ravit
Role
Role Term: Text
Reader
Name: Corporate
Name Part
Brown University. English
Role
Role Term: Text
sponsor
Genre (aat)
theses
Abstract
This project evaluates the twinned discourses of globalism and humanitarianism through an analysis of the body in the postcolonial novel. In offering celebratory accounts of the promises of globalization, recent movements in critical theory have privileged the cosmopolitan, transnational, and global over the postcolonial. Recognizing the potential pitfalls of globalism, these theorists have often turned to transnational fiction as supplying a corrective dose of humanitarian sentiment that guards a global affective community against the potential exploitations and excesses of neoliberalism. While authors such as Amitav Ghosh, Nuruddin Farah, and Rohinton Mistry have been read in a transnational, cosmopolitan framework––which they have often courted and constructed––I argue that their theorizations of the body contain a critical, postcolonial rejoinder to the liberal humanist tradition that they seek to critique from within. The project attempts not only to trace the changing relationship between corporeality, technology, environment, and the state, but also to interrogate the foundational myths and inherent limits of a transnational humanitarianism that unwittingly masks deeper structural inequalities. Many theorizations of the body continue to frame it within the familiar dualism of embodiment and dehumanization. While building on work in feminist theory and trauma studies, this dissertation analyzes theorizations of the body within postcolonial literary texts that negotiate the promises and perils of an emergent globalism. In doing so, it hopes to recover the contributions that the literary can offer as a supplement to legal and political discourse. By actively theorizing the relationship between bodily experience and social structures, transnational, postcolonial authors challenge forms of global governance that, while couched in narratives of progress, have controlled and harnessed bodies in new ways.
Subject
Topic
globalism
Subject
Topic
body
Subject
Topic
postcolonial
Subject (FAST) (authorityURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast", valueURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast/963578")
Topic
Humanitarianism
Subject (FAST) (authorityURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast", valueURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast/1730057")
Topic
Human body
Record Information
Record Content Source (marcorg)
RPB
Record Creation Date (encoding="iso8601")
20141006
Language
Language Term: Code (ISO639-2B)
eng
Language Term: Text
English
Identifier: DOI
10.7301/Z0WS8RKT
Access Condition: rights statement (href="http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/")
In Copyright
Access Condition: restriction on access
Collection is open for research.
Type of Resource (primo)
dissertations