This powerful selection of essays proposes practices of reading
and criticism to make the field of postcolonial studies more fully
attentive to historical circumstances and socio-material
conditions. Benita Parry points to 'directions and dead ends' in
the discipline she has helped to shape, with a first series of
essays vigorously challenging colonial discourse theory and
postcolonialism as we have known them. She then turns to literature
with a series of detailed readings that not only demonstrate her
theoretical position at work, but also give new dimensions to
widely studied texts by Rudyard Kipling, Joseph Conrad, H. G. Wells
and E. M. Forster. Parry argues throughout that the material
impulses of colonialism, its appropriation of physical resources,
exploitation of human labour and institutional repression have too
long been allowed to recede from view.
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