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Alternative title: Inter ventions
Issue Details: First known date: 1998... 1998 Interventions : International Journal of Postcolonial Studies
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Issues

y separately published work icon Interventions : International Journal of Postcolonial Studies vol. 22 no. 5 2020 19655220 2020 periodical issue

'Since the turn of the millennium, debates in postcolonial studies and world literature have repeatedly shown the realities of empire to be continuing, immediate and visceral. What has been overlooked thus far are the ways in which the bodily has re-emerged in postcolonial cultural production as a receptor to, and vocabulary for, these immanent violences. Fictions from across the global south are drawing with apparently increasing frequency on corporeal lexica in their imaginings of on-going imperial circumstances. At the same time, the new millennium has witnessed the rise, in multiple postcolonial contexts, of speculative genres – science fiction and horror pre-eminent among them – to which the body is central. Together, all of this suggests the need for renewed reflection on the poetics and functions of the bodily in contemporary fictional engagements with empire. This special issue takes up this imperative. Our interest lies with the grammars and technologies offered by the corporeal in postcolonial cultural production since the millennium, and in the possibilities and limitations of these bodily registers. Over the course of this introduction, we outline the material, narrative and theoretical contexts within which we see the body re-emerging as a site of renewed critical and literary or cinematic potential. We return to established analytical categories for the corporeal in postcolonial literary studies, and show that current fictional handlings of the body and embodiment appear resistant to interpretation via these rubrics. Taking our cue both from a materialist theoretical (re)turn that corresponds to the turn of the millennium and from aesthetic developments in literature and film of the same period, we go on to lay the groundwork for an approach to the body as this is currently emerging in contemporary postcolonial and peripheral imaginaries.' (Introduction)

y separately published work icon Interventions : International Journal of Postcolonial Studies vol. 22 no. 2 September 2019 18650027 2019 periodical issue
y separately published work icon Interventions : International Journal of Postcolonial Studies vol. 21 no. 8 December 2019 18002980 2019 periodical issue
y separately published work icon Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies vol. 19 no. 7 2017 12336378 2017 periodical issue
y separately published work icon Interventions : International Journal of Postcolonial Studies vol. 18 no. 4 2016 9487066 2016 periodical issue
y separately published work icon Interventions : International Journal of Postcolonial vol. 17 no. 6 January 2015 10701933 2015 periodical issue

'This foreword begins with a survey of the field of postcolonial studies, from its points of departure to its current situation and future directions. We suggest that the field has long sought to problematize borders, particularly those that separate academic disciplines. The foreword also highlights the material consequences of border crossing for people of colour and other ‘Others’, examining Caryl Phillips' case study of the migrant David Oluwale. Oluwale's abhorrent treatment in Leeds necessitates discussion of the burgeoning new current of postcolonial cities research, to which this special issue adds interdisciplinary perspectives. To explore whether or not global and postcolonial cities are actually synonymous, we return to the origins of postcolonial studies to suggest that the postcolonial city has a longer provenance than the global, and retains the double meaning of ‘post’ as signalling both a coming after and a continuation. We go on to argue that the special issue demonstrates that postcolonial cities exclude even as they embrace, and produce both internal and external marginality. The foreword concludes by adumbrating potential problems with the special issue's topic: its neglect of economics in favour of culture, its overlooking of the postcolonial rural, and as terminology not coming from within but without.' (Forword 783)

y separately published work icon Interventions : International Journal of Postcolonial Studies vol. 17 no. 2 January 2015 8422675 2015 periodical issue
y separately published work icon Interventions : International Journal of Postcolonial Studies vol. 16 no. 1 2014 6874685 2014 periodical issue
y separately published work icon Interventions : International Journal of Postcolonial Studies Special Issue : Indigeneity and Performance : Interdisciplinary Perspectives vol. 15 no. 2 2013 6134665 2013 periodical issue
y separately published work icon Interventions : International Journal of Postcolonial Studies vol. 12 no. 3 November 2010 Z1765017 2010 periodical issue
y separately published work icon Interventions : International Journal of Postcolonial Studies Inter ventions vol. 9 no. 1 March 2007 Z1368482 2007 periodical issue
y separately published work icon Interventions : International Journal of Postcolonial Studies Inter ventions vol. 2 no. 2 2000 Z911671 2000 periodical issue
y separately published work icon Interventions : International Journal of Postcolonial Studies Inter ventions vol. 2 no. 1 2000 Z911667 2000 periodical issue
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