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Race, Rhetoric, and the Postcolonial

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03 December 1998

Six internationally renowned intellectuals are brought together in a cross-disciplinary dialogue that addresses rhetoric, writing, race, feminist theory, cultural studies, and postcolonial theory.
Race, Rhetoric, and the Postcolonial brings together six scholarly interviews with internationally renowned intellectuals outside of rhetoric and composition whose work has direct implications for scholarship within the discipline. Included are interviews with postcolonial theorist Homi Bhabha, postcolonial feminist and race theorist Gloria Anzaldúa, African American race scholar Michael Eric Dyson, British cultural studies scholar Stuart Hall, Argentinean political theorist Ernesto Laclau, and French philosopher Chantal Mouffe.


"This book defines links between postcolonial theory and U.S. multiculturalism. The particulars and differences within African American and Chicano/Latino/Hispanic cultures and identities are elegantly illustrated and cogently debated. Ties between multiculturalism and postcolonial theory are linked at many points to concepts of composition and rhetoric—'writing' and 'self'—in diverse, sometimes surprising, nearly always illuminating ways. It offers much food for thought, further discussion, and debate." — C. Jan Swearingen, University of Texas at Arlington
"I learned a lot from this book about the complexities of postcolonial theories, and about how those theories intersect with issues of composition and rhetoric. I enjoyed the progression from Homi Bhabha's poststructuralist understanding of postcolonialism through U.S. Latina and African American writers (Anzaldúa, Dyson) and out to the British/Caribbean context that Laclau, Mouffe, and Stuart Hall inflect in such different ways. This book provides an accessible introduction to issues which are connected to the daily concerns of writing teachers in important, but not obvious ways. Reading these interviews helps to illuminate those connections." — Susan Wells, Temple University
"In the postcolonial era when the English language is no longer confined to imperialistic contexts, this book is a step toward the democratization of language across cultures. The classical definition of rhetoric as the art of persuasion does not change here, but this book points out the need for contextual considerations and sensitivity to cultural nuances." — Mabel Khawaja, Hampton University
Introduction
Staging the Politics of Difference: Homi Bhabha's Critical Literacy
Gary A. Olson and Lynn Worsham
Toward a Mestiza Rhetoric: Gloria Anzaldúa on Composition and Postcoloniality
Andrea A. Lunsford
Race and the Public Intellectual: A Conversation with Michael Eric Dyson
Sidney L Dobrin
Hegemony and the Future of Democracy: Ernesto Laclau's Political Philosophy
Lynn Worsham and Gary A. Olson
Rethinking Political Community: Chantal Mouffe's Liberal Socialism
Lynn Worsham and Gary A. Olson
Cultural Composition: Stuart Hall on Ethnicity and the Discursive Turn
Julie Drew
Selected Bibliography
Contributors
Index