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National Belongings: Hybridity in Italian Colonial and Postcolonial Cultures New edition [Minkštas viršelis]

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  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 244 pages, aukštis x plotis: 220x150 mm, weight: 380 g
  • Serija: Italian Modernities 7
  • Išleidimo metai: 14-May-2010
  • Leidėjas: Verlag Peter Lang
  • ISBN-10: 3039119656
  • ISBN-13: 9783039119653
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 244 pages, aukštis x plotis: 220x150 mm, weight: 380 g
  • Serija: Italian Modernities 7
  • Išleidimo metai: 14-May-2010
  • Leidėjas: Verlag Peter Lang
  • ISBN-10: 3039119656
  • ISBN-13: 9783039119653
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
The series aims to publish innovative research on the written, material and visual cultures and intellectual history of modern Italy, from the 19th century to the present day. It is especially interested in work which articulates aspects of Italy's particular, and in many respects, peculiar, interactions with notions of modernity and postmodernity, broadly understood. It also aims to encourage critical dialogue between new developments in scholarship in Italy and in the English-speaking world.

Scholars of Italian colonialism have been reluctant to acknowledge the influence that local populations and their culture had on Italians and on the ways in which they settled and administered the territories they occupied. This tendency has reinforced the notion that the European domination of Africa was total both culturally and politically. Yet there is evidence to suggest that in every sphere of colonial life, the relationship between colonizers and colonized was more dynamic and complex than has been assumed.
The essays in this interdisciplinary volume address the gap in Italian colonial/post-colonial studies by examining how different notions of ‘hybridity’ help illuminate the specific nature and circumstances of the Italian colonial and postcolonial condition. Some of the contributors see hybridity as a positive challenge to fixed categorizations. Others contend that its hasty deployment promotes a lack of attention to local difference. Foregrounding specific instances of cultural practice across a range of media from literature to oral testimony and the internet, this volume represents a new stage in the study of Italy’s colonial past and its postcolonial afterlife.

Recenzijos

«Dem Band gelingt es, einen oft überraschenden Einblick in bisher in der traditionellen Italianistik vernachlässigte oder verdrängte Paradigmen zu geben und ihre Wichtigkeit für ein vertieftes Verständnis der italienischen Gesellschaft, Politik und Kultur der Gegenwart aufzuzeigen.» (Annette Keilhauer, Germanisch-Romanische Monatsschrift 61, 2011/3)

Acknowledgements vii
Notes on Contributors ix
Introduction: Hybridity in Italian Colonial and Postcolonial Culture 1(20)
Jacqueline Andall
Derek Duncan
PART I Colonialism in the Postcolonial
21(42)
1 Displacing the Colonial Event: Hybrid Memories of Postcolonial Italy
23(18)
Alessandro Triulzi
2 Mimic-nation, Mimic-men: Contextualizing Italy's Migration Culture through Bhabha
41(22)
Vetri Nathan
PART II Narratives of Settlement
63(86)
3 Italy and/in Tianjin: Remaking the Urban Form and Rewriting History
65(24)
Maurizio Marinelli
4 Between Colony and Nation on Italy's `Fourth Shore'
89(18)
Roberta Pergher
5 Eritrean Memories of the Postcolonial Period: Ambivalence and Mimicry in Italian Schools in Asmara
107(20)
Domenica Ghidei Biidu
Sabrina Marchetti
6 Language and its Alternatives in Italophone Migrant Writing
127(22)
Jennifer Burns
PART III Narratives of Self
149(86)
7 Mussolini's Journey to Libya (1937): Ritual, Power and Transculturation
151(20)
Charles Burdett
8 The G2 Network and Other Second-Generation Voices: Claiming Rights and Transforming Identities
171(24)
Jacqueline Andall
9 Kledi Kadiu: Managing Postcolonial Celebrity
195(20)
Derek Duncan
10 Intimate Truth and (Post) colonial Knowledge in Shirin Ramzanali Fazel's Lontano da Mogadiscio
215(20)
Rhiannon Noel Welch
Index 235
The Editors: Jacqueline Andall is Senior Lecturer in Italian and European Studies at the University of Bath. She has published primarily on contemporary Italian politics and society, with particular reference to immigration, the second generation and postcolonialism. Derek Duncan is Professor of Italian Cultural Studies at the University of Bristol. He has published extensively on modern Italian literature and film, with particular reference to issues of gender and sexuality, and colonial and postcolonial culture.