"We, the readers and students of literature, have been hijacked.
The literary critics, our teachers, those assassins of culture,
have put us up against the wall and held us captive." So begins
Jonah Raskin's The Mythology of Imperialism. When first published
in 1971, this book was nothing short of a call to arms, an open
revolt against the literary establishment. In his critique of five
well-known British writers--Joseph Conrad, Rudyard Kipling, D. H.
Lawrence, E. M. Forster, and Joyce Cary--Raskin not only developed
the model for a revolutionary anti-imperialist criticism, but,
through this book's influence on Edward Said, helped usher in the
field of postcolonial studies.
Nearly four decades later, The Mythology of Imperialism is all
the more relevant. Its readings of British literature still offer
bold and original insight into the relationship between text,
artist, and historical context. But, perhaps more crucially, this
book sends a revolutionary message to all readers and students of
literature. Against much of today's postcolonialism--diluted by
postmodern obfuscation and largely detached from its historical
roots--Raskin locates the center of his anti-imperialist criticism
in the anti-imperialist struggle itself and takes his cues not from
"the assassins of culture" in the academy but from the national
liberation movements of his time.
Written with absorbing passion and machete-sharp analysis, this
new edition of The Mythology of Imperialism includes the original
text, a new introduction and afterword by the author, and a preface
by Bruce Robbins.
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