Routledge Handbook of Classics, Colonialism, and Postcolonial Theory

Routledge Handbook of Classics, Colonialism, and Postcolonial Theory

Akrigg, Ben; Blouin, Katherine

Taylor & Francis Ltd

07/2024

24

Dura

Inglês

9780367555481

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1. Introduction, Katherine Blouin and Ben Akrigg; 2. Edward Said's Orientalism: a reappraisal, Phiroze Vasunia; 3. Classics at the borderlands: decolonising with Gloria Anzaldua, Mathura Umachandran; 4. Classics between epistemicides and hauntologies: a Caribbean reading, D. Padilla Peralta; 5. Placefulness and classical topoi in the writing of Ishion Hutchinson, Sasha-Mae Eccleston; 6. Indigenous writers of North America and Greco-Roman antiquity: postcolonialism without the post?, Craig Williams; 7. The ancient past in the historical present: postcolonial theory and ancient Indian history, Mekhola Gomes; 8. Subalternity in the Roman metropole, Amy Richlin; 9. Rape and race: intersectional perspectives on Aeschylus' Suppliants, with a coda on Charles Mee's Big Love, Nancy Sorkin Rabinowitz; 10. Resistant receptions: a postcolonial approach to receptions of Greek tragedy, Amy Pistone; 11. "Two-Eyed Seeing" and teaching classical literature, Aven McMaster; 12. Postcolonial feminisms and colonial encounters in the Hellenistic period, Patricia Eunji Kim; 13. Periplus, periplum, periphery: how to map classics from the edges, Grant Parker; 14. Time and the other Greeks, Dimitri Nakassis; 15. Our terms and theirs: some reflections on recent approaches to Greek religion, Kenneth W. Yu; 16. (Post-)colonialism and ancient magic, Korshi Dosoo; 17. Haec de Africa. Rome's imagined Africa and the limits of fiction, Elena Giusti; 18. A colonialist trick of the eye: Valerius Maximus' Memorable Deeds and Sayings as a tool of imperial education, Liz Gloyn; 19. "They look white, but they're not": nationality, race, and classical tradition in Brazil, Juliana Bastos Marques; 20. Res Diversissimas: a postcolonial reading of Hannibal's reception, Dominic Machado; 21. "Perhaps it matters little to what race Terence belonged": historicizing the life of Publius Terentius Afer, Denise Eileen McCoskey; 22. Alexander the Great studies and Hellenism in Uzbekistan: a postcolonial and decolonial discourse within a Central Asian archaeology stalled between post-Soviet myths, centre-periphery tensions, and non-recognition of Russian colonialism, Svetlana Gorshenina and Claude Rapin; 23. Locating Indo-Iranian borderlands between Central Asia and South Asia: a reading of the past connected history (third century BCE to sixth century CE), Suchandra Ghosh; 24. "E Farao!": the reception of ancient Egypt in Brazilian carnival, Franziska Naether; 25. The long, winding, and bumpy road: seeing museum antiquities as colonial legavies, Elizabeth Marlowe; 26. Thucydides on colonialism and hegemonic discourse, Neville Morley; 27. Forgery as decolonisation: Constantine Simonides in Liverpool, Rachel Yuen-Collingridge; 28. Those who tell their stories never die: on being an 'Indigenous' Egyptian researcher in the current increasing 'local' inclusion turn, Heba Abd el Gawad; 29. Troubled archive: (de)coloniality and Egypt's papyri, Usama Ali Gad; 30. The materiality of papyri and the decolonization of Papyrology, Myrto Malouta; 31. "Many strange and impossible views": the curious career of Frederic Cope Whitehouse (1842-1911), Brendan Haug; 32. Teaching classics in South Africa-a hopeful act: reflections on a decolonising teaching experience, Amy L. Daniels; 33. Colonizing the past: the case of Argos in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, Jonathan M. Hall; 34. Examinations at the founding of the University of Toronto: the place of classics in the institutionalisation of Canadian education, Alison Cleverley; 35. "The Ancient Romans conquered all Syria and Egypt": encounters between Arabic and the Classics in the nineteenth century, Rachel Mairs; 36. Claiming authority: the Antiquities Act and the legacy of classical archaeology in America, Christine Johnston; 37. Where Next?, Hardeep Singh Dhindsa; 38. Where Next? 2: reflections on my struggle with theory, Shelley P. Haley; 39. Where Next? 3, Barbara Goff.
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decoloniality;decolonization;postcolonial theory;imperial history;history of colonialism;museum studies;reception studies;South Asia;Central Asia;West Asia;Classics and Africa;Classics and Asia;Classics in the Caribbean;Classics and Latin America;Classics and South America;antiquities;colonial legacies