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DECOLONIZING CULTURE: TOWARD A THEORY FOR POSTCOLONIAL WOMENS TEXTS Postcolonial women writers participate actively in the ongoing pro cess of decolonizing culture Fanon's concept that "decolonization is always a violent phenomenon" is useful for an analysis of how the English language is "violated" from its standard usage and how literary forms are transformed from their definitions within the Western
The post-colonial studies reader - Archive. org First things first : problems of a feminist approach to African literature Kirsten Holst Petersen -- Decolonizing culture : toward a theory for Post-colonial women's texts Ketu H Katrak -- Under Western eyes : feminist scholarship and colonial discourses Chandra Talpade Mohanty -- Writing postcoloniality and feminism Trinh T Minh-ha
Ketu Katrak · Decoloniality, First Nations Thinkers and thought and . . . Katrak, K H (2011) Contemporary Indian Dance: New Creative Choreography in India and the Diaspora, New York: Palgrave, Katrak, K H (2009) Decolonizing Culture: Toward a Theory for Postcolonial Women's Texts MFS Modern Fiction Studies, 35, 157 - 179 Katrak, K H (2008) Cultural Politics and the Nobel Prize, Contributions in Black Studies
UC Irvine - Faculty Profile System Ketu H Katrak born in Bombay, India, is Professor of Drama at the University of California, Irvine (UCI) She was founding Chair of the Department of Asian American Studies (1996-2004) at UCI, and prior to that has taught at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst and Yale University
Decolonizing Culture : Toward a Theory for Postcolonial Womens Texts . . . Decolonizing Culture : Toward a Theory for Postcolonial Women's Texts in Narratives of Colonial Resistance Author KATRAK, K H Source Modern fiction studies 1989, Vol 35, Num 1, pp 157-179 ISSN 0026-7724 Scientific domain Literature Publisher Purdue University, Department of English, West Lafayette, IN Publication country United States