*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.
Review final details at checkout.
₹312
₹350
10% OFF
Hardback
All inclusive*
Qty:
1
About The Book
Description
Author
As a school of criticism the central argument in Postcolonial studies revolves around dismantling the dominant narrative of colonial or imperial history. A colonization process not only captures the native people and culture but their lands too. Proper reading of postcolonial theory would be by understanding the epistemology of colonized environment or vice-versa. Even after decolonization the ideology of imperialism is persistent in native memory and thought. An embeddedness in native psyche not only nurtures imperialism but manifests them with the footprints of colonial masters. In postcolonial countries the discourse of social and economic justice is deeply rooted in ecology. As a consequence environmental activists from postcolonial nations tend to see any modern policy as a disguised form of neocolonialism or imperial dominance globalization and modernization. Since the shocks of imperialism and globalization are most strongly felt in the third world countries most of them being former colonies this edited volume intends to explore texts by South Asian writers examining how these writers and their characters cope with the destruction of the environment. This edited volume plans to seek out the writings of epistemological understanding of our environment. Moreover the volume would also see a critical entanglement of race class gender culture modernization globalization nation and trans-nation etc. Furthermore this book will attempt to show how different genres of literature ranging from fiction to non-fiction can bring out inimitable insights into varied understanding of postcolonial and ecocritical studies.