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Domesticating the "New Terrorism": The Case of the Maoist Insurgency in India
In: The European legacy: the official journal of the International Society for the Study of European Ideas (ISSEI), Band 19, Heft 5, S. 590-605
ISSN: 1470-1316
Postcolonialism: interdisciplinary or interdiscursive?
In: Third world quarterly, Band 32, Heft 4, S. 653-672
ISSN: 1360-2241
Postcolonialism: interdisciplinary or interdiscursive?
In: Third world quarterly, Band 32, Heft 4, S. 653-672
ISSN: 0143-6597
World Affairs Online
(An)other Way of Being Human: 'indigenous' alternative(s) to postcolonial humanism
In: Third world quarterly, Band 32, Heft 9, S. 1557-1572
ISSN: 1360-2241
Review Essay: Humanism and Its Other: Difference and Disjuncture in Postcolonial Theory
In: Distinktion: scandinavian journal of social theory, Band 10, Heft 1, S. 87-99
ISSN: 2159-9149
Introduction: Civic Dissent and Violence in Nigeria: Literature, Film, and Media
In: Matatu, Band 54, Heft 2, S. 155-171
ISSN: 1875-7421
Reworking postcolonialism: globalization, labour and rights
"An interdisciplinary collection of essays, Reworking Postcolonialism explores questions of work, precarity, migration, minority and indigenous rights in relation to contemporary globalization. It focuses on the impact of the global market forces on the formation of new subject positions among urban dwellers, exiles, and other disenfranchised communities. Bringing together political, economic and literary approaches to texts and events from across the postcolonial world, the essays collected here investigate the transformative effects of the global dissemination of capital, goods and movements of people, and call for a revision of the existing discourses on rights, entitlements and citizenship"--
Violence in South Asia: contemporary perspectives
"This volume explores new perspectives on contemporary forms of violence in South Asia. Drawing on extensive fieldwork and case studies, it examines the infiltration of violence at the societal level and affords a comparative regional analysis of its historical, cultural and geopolitical origins in South Asia. Featuring essays from Sri Lanka to Nepal, and from Afghanistan to Burma, it sheds light on issues as wide-ranging as lynching and mob justice, hate speech, caste violence, gender-based violence, and the plight of the Rohingyas, among others. Lucid and engaging, this book will be an invaluable source of reference as well as scholarship to students and researchers of postcolonial studies, anthropology, sociology, cultural geography, minority studies, politics and gender studies"--
World Affairs Online