Comparative hybridities: Latin American intellectuals and postcolonialists
2004; Routledge; Volume: 16; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1080/0893569042000239271
ISSN1475-8059
Autores Tópico(s)Latin American and Latino Studies
ResumoTracing the discursive history of the term “hybridity” in the work of Nestor García Canclini manifests the roots of his thought in Latin American intellectual history. In particular, the regional tradition growing out of José Carlos Mariátegui's writings inflects García Canclini's work with a concern for historical location and questions of political economy. These emphases contrast with those of Anglo-American postcolonial theory for in this latter discourse, hybridity is understood textually, as a linguistic or psychoanalytic category, just as colonialism is often centered in the consciousness of the Western colonizing subject. The goal of examining these contrasting conceptions of hybridity is not merely to expose the culturalist fetish of much mainstream postcolonialism, but also to suggest a larger contrast between intellectual voices in the Global South and mainstream postcolonialist critics who are often taken to speak for the southern intellectual.
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