File spoon-archives/postcolonial.archive/postcolonial_2003/postcolonial.0301, message 15


Date: Thu, 09 Jan 2003 13:33:01 -0500
From: Amrita Ghosh <aghosh-AT-alumni.rutgers.edu>
Subject: Re: globalization


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Hi Liam,
Thanks very much for the reply. I am looking more into the notions of hybridity, culture with respect to the discussions of globalization. I would be interested in looking at The Postcolonial Exotic, that you mentioned in your last mail. Is it listed in Huggan?
Thanks once again,
Amrita
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Liam Connell 
  To: postcolonial-AT-lists.village.virginia.edu 
  Sent: Thursday, January 09, 2003 8:15 AM
  Subject: Re: globalization


  Amrita

  Can you say a bit more about the angle that your looking for.  A lot of the work on globalization is of a socio-economic bent.  I'd recommend Hirst and Thompson. 1996_Globalization in Question_ (there is a revised edition) as a nice antidote to many of the more exorbitant claims therein.

  I'm currently trying to put together a session for an MA module on globalization where I'm trying to get them to look at globalization as it pertains to textuality which seems to be a less frequently commented upon area of debate.  At the moment the reading I'm using is extracts from Huggan. 2001. _The Postcolonial Exotic_ and some articles from a 2001 edition of _South Atlantic Quarterly_100 (3) which is about literature and globalization.

  I'm hoping this will feed into discussions of _Satanic Verses_

  Liam

  At 01:32 09/01/03 -0500, you wrote:

    Hi Everyone,
    Can anyone please refer me some postcolonial theorists who have discussed
    globalization?

    Thanks very much,
    Amrita



         --- from list postcolonial-AT-lists.village.virginia.edu ---
  _________________________________

  Dr Liam Connell
  Department of Humanities
  University of Hertfordshire
  Wall Hall
  Watford Campus
  Aldenham
  WD25 8AT 


--Boundary_(ID_VHLqwHYWHSev+R+8/aNL5g)

HTML VERSION:

Hi Liam,
Thanks very much for the reply. I am looking more into the notions of hybridity, culture with respect to the discussions of globalization. I would be interested in looking at The Postcolonial Exotic, that you mentioned in your last mail. Is it listed in Huggan?
Thanks once again,
Amrita
----- Original Message -----
From: Liam Connell
To: postcolonial-AT-lists.village.virginia.edu
Sent: Thursday, January 09, 2003 8:15 AM
Subject: Re: globalization

Amrita

Can you say a bit more about the angle that your looking for.  A lot of the work on globalization is of a socio-economic bent.  I'd recommend Hirst and Thompson. 1996_Globalization in Question_ (there is a revised edition) as a nice antidote to many of the more exorbitant claims therein.

I'm currently trying to put together a session for an MA module on globalization where I'm trying to get them to look at globalization as it pertains to textuality which seems to be a less frequently commented upon area of debate.  At the moment the reading I'm using is extracts from Huggan. 2001. _The Postcolonial Exotic_ and some articles from a 2001 edition of _South Atlantic Quarterly_100 (3) which is about literature and globalization.

I'm hoping this will feed into discussions of _Satanic Verses_

Liam

At 01:32 09/01/03 -0500, you wrote:
Hi Everyone,
Can anyone please refer me some postcolonial theorists who have discussed
globalization?

Thanks very much,
Amrita



     --- from list postcolonial-AT-lists.village.virginia.edu ---

_________________________________

Dr Liam Connell
Department of Humanities
University of Hertfordshire
Wall Hall
Watford Campus
Aldenham
WD25 8AT

--Boundary_(ID_VHLqwHYWHSev+R+8/aNL5g)-- --- from list postcolonial-AT-lists.village.virginia.edu ---

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