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Imperial Debris On Ruins And Ruination 1st Ann Laura Stoler Ed

  • SKU: BELL-4939052
Imperial Debris On Ruins And Ruination 1st Ann Laura Stoler Ed
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Imperial Debris On Ruins And Ruination 1st Ann Laura Stoler Ed instant download after payment.

Publisher: Duke University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.24 MB
Pages: 384
Author: Ann Laura Stoler (ed.)
ISBN: 9780822353485, 0822353482
Language: English
Year: 2013
Edition: 1st

Product desciption

Imperial Debris On Ruins And Ruination 1st Ann Laura Stoler Ed by Ann Laura Stoler (ed.) 9780822353485, 0822353482 instant download after payment.

Imperial Debris redirects critical focus from ruins as evidence of the past to "ruination" as the processes through which imperial power occupies the present. Ann Laura Stoler's introduction is a manifesto, a compelling call for postcolonial studies to expand its analytical scope to address the toxic but less perceptible corrosions and violent accruals of colonial aftermaths, as well as their durable traces on the material environment and people's bodies and minds. In their provocative, tightly focused responses to Stoler, the contributors explore subjects as seemingly diverse as villages submerged during the building of a massive dam in southern India, Palestinian children taught to envision and document ancestral homes razed by the Israeli military, and survival on the toxic edges of oil refineries and amid the remains of apartheid in Durban, South Africa. They consider the significance of Cold War imagery of a United States decimated by nuclear blast, perceptions of a swath of Argentina's Gran Chaco as a barbarous void, and the enduring resonance, in contemporary sexual violence, of atrocities in King Leopold's Congo. Reflecting on the physical destruction of Sri Lanka, on Detroit as a colonial metropole in relation to sites of ruination in the Amazon, and on interactions near a UNESCO World Heritage Site in the Brazilian state of Bahia, the contributors attend to present-day harms in the occluded, unexpected sites and situations where earlier imperial formations persist.

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