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The interdependencies between politics, governance and technology
have created a 'virtual state'. The author analyses this
development within the framework of postmodernism in order to
illustrate the importance of adopting a postmodern perspective to
understand the theory and practice of public administration and
politics. This book examines the special connections linking
politics, administration and technology in the 'information
society'. Paul Frissen describes recent developments both within
public administration and in postmodernism and uses examples from
Dutch public administration in order to emphasise the importance of
the postmodern perspective. Finally, the author considers the role
of politics in the virtual state. This book will prove to be
invaluable to scholars of public and social policy, public
administration and politics. The translation was funded by NWO, the
Dutch Organization for Scientific Research.
The four authors treated here -- Victor Segalen, Andre Malraux,
Marguerite Duras, and Roland Barthes -- each experienced at one
point in his or her life a deep dissatisfaction with modern
European values, followed by a turn toward the East. However, due
to different class, gender, and personal backgrounds, they each
entertained diverse and complex relationships to (post)colonial
ideology, which they both served and subverted at the same time. By
engaging in an "off-center" reading of these authors' Eastern
texts, and by examining their ambiguous constructions of the
Orient, Figuring the East challenges the facile dichotomy that
postcolonial critics frequently draw between the Western colonial
Self and the Eastern exotic Other.
French Women and the Empire is the first book-length investigation
of colonial gender politics in Third Republic France, using
Indochina as a case study. Its departure point is the interrogation
of the dramatic change in the French colonialist view of the empire
as an exclusively male preserve where women feared to tread. At the
turn of the century, a reverse discourse emerged in the metropole,
forcefully arguing that colonial female emigration was essential to
"true " colonisation. The study begins by analysing the highly
complex web of interconnected factors underlying this radical
transformation in the representation of the empire from being a "no
woman's land " into a "woman's haven. " Then, drawing on a large
body of hitherto little examined sources, the study continues by
reconstructing the experiences and activities of French women in
Indochina from the fin-de-siecle to the interwar era. The most
significant finding from this study is that contrary to the image
propagated by promotional literature of the colonial woman as
essentially a bourgeois homemaker, the class and ethnic make-up of
the French female population in the Asian colony was in fact
remarkably heterogeneous, with a sizeable contingent of them,
married or single, actively engaging in a variety of paid
employment outside the home. By thus foregrounding the diversity
and complexity of colonial female experiences, French Women and the
Empire seeks to move the story of French women and the empire
beyond the narrow confines of the imperial family romance to the
wider arena of the colonial public sphere.
At the intersection of literary, cultural, and postcolonial
studies, this volume looks at French perceptions of 'Indochina' as
they are conveyed through a variety of media including cinema,
literature, art, and historical or anthropological writings. The
volume is long awaited, as France's memory of 'Indochina' is
understudied compared to its relationship with its former colonies
in West and North Africa. The book has contemporary urgency as the
makeup of France's immigrant population changes and grows to
include Vietnamese, Cambodian, and Laotioan populations.
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