...and NOT the Solution!
The Woke Myth: Western Colonialism Broke Africa and They're Still Trying to Recover from It.
Woke "White Colonizers Bad" (Post-Colonialism) ... Both Excuses and Fuels Continued Contemporary POC Tribal Racism!
from Google AI:
Postcolonial theory is an academic framework analyzing the cultural, economic, and political legacy of colonial rule, focusing on how Western powers shaped knowledge and identity in colonized regions. It examines power dynamics, representation, and the enduring impact of imperialism, aiming to decenter Eurocentric narratives.Key Concepts in Postcolonial Theory
- Orientalism: Coined by Edward Said, this describes how the West (Occident) created a stereotyped, "othered" view of the East (Orient) to justify colonial rule.
- Hybridity: Homi Bhabha’s concept of the mixture of colonizer and colonized cultures, creating new, complex cultural forms rather than simple imitation.
- Subaltern: Gayatri Spivak’s term for marginalized groups—the lowest classes—who are denied a voice or representation in history.
- Agency: The capacity of colonized subjects to act independently and resist colonial power structures.
- Eurocentrism: The tendency to view the world primarily through a European lens, treating European culture as superior or universal.
- Othering: Defining the colonized population as fundamentally different from, and inferior to, the European "self".
Main Themes
- Identity and Representation: Analyzing how colonial discourse created negative or exoticized stereotypes, forcing colonized peoples to adopt "hybrid" identities.
- Power and Knowledge: Challenging the idea that knowledge is neutral, arguing that Western academic, literary, and artistic traditions were used to justify imperialism.
- Resistance: Studying the struggles for independence and the ways indigenous knowledge survived and fought back.
- Neocolonialism: Examining how economic and political dependency persists after formal independence, often through organizations like the IMF or global trade.
Effects on Politics and IdentityPostcolonial theory argues that political independence did not erase structural injustices. It affects national identity by forcing postcolonial nations to navigate between indigenous traditions and the lingering influence of colonial education, language, and legal systems. It also highlights how "postcolonial melancholia" can affect the former colonizer, leading to a nostalgic, often racist, representation of their imperial past.Main Criticisms of Postcolonial Theory
- High Academic Jargon: Critics (and some practitioners) argue that thinkers like Spivak and Bhabha use dense postmodern language that makes the theory inaccessible to the public.
- Lack of Political Engagement: Some argue that, despite its focus on the "subaltern," the academic field is dominated by intellectuals who publish in English, failing to reach the local populations they study.
- Over-focus on Discourse: Conservative critics argue that it unfairly attacks Western civilization and focuses too much on cultural representation rather than material conditions.
Key Theorists
- Edward Said: Author of Orientalism.
- Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak: Famous for "Can the Subaltern Speak?".
- Homi K. Bhabha: Known for concepts of hybridity and mimicry.
- Frantz Fanon: Wrote about the psychological impact of racism and colonialism.
Key Texts
- Orientalism by Edward Said (1978)
- The Wretched of the Earth by Frantz Fanon (1961)
- In Other Worlds: Essays in Cultural Politics by Gayatri Spivak (1987)
- The Location of Culture by Homi Bhabha (1994)
“Postcolonialism is the invention of rich Indian guys who wanted to make a good career in the west by playing on the guilt of white liberals”
STOP Trying to De-Colonize the West!

1 comment:
WOKE has nothing to do with religious hate or genocide. In fact WOKE abhors genocide, hate, racism, misogyny, bigotry, etc.
And, western European colonialism and the forced conversion to Christianity is as much, if not more so the problem than any of the bullshit spewed by rightwing racists, bigots, misogynists, and Empire Christianity and Extremist Zionism.
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