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Gender, empire, and postcolony[elect...
~
Klobucka, Anna M., (1961-,)
Gender, empire, and postcolony[electronic resource] :luso-Afro-Brazilian intersections /
纪录类型:
书目-语言数据,印刷品 : Monograph/item
[NT 15000414] null:
869.09981
[NT 47271] Title/Author:
Gender, empire, and postcolony : luso-Afro-Brazilian intersections // Edited by Hilary Owen, Anna M. Klobucka.
作者:
Owen, Hilary,
[NT 51406] other author:
Klobucka, Anna M.,
出版者:
Basingstoke : : Palgrave Macmillan :, 2014.
面页册数:
240 p. : : 13 b&w, ill.
附注:
Electronic book text.
标题:
African literature (Portuguese) - History and criticism - 20th century.
标题:
Brazilian literature - History and criticism - 20th century.
标题:
Gender identity in literature.
标题:
Imperialism in literature.
标题:
Portuguese literature - History and criticism - 20th century.
标题:
Postcolonialism in literature.
标题:
Colonialism & imperialism.
标题:
Cultural studies.
标题:
Social & cultural anthropology, ethnography.
标题:
Society.
ISBN:
1137340991 (electronic bk.) :
ISBN:
9781137340993 (electronic bk.) :
ISBN:
9781137343413
[NT 15000228] null:
Introduction: Anna M. Klobucka and Hilary Owen PART I: LUSOTROPICALIST AFFECT AND ANTI-IMPERIAL ETHICS 1. Pessoa's Works on the Self: Toward an Anti-Imperial Askesis-- Leela Gandhi, 2. Lusotropicalist Entanglements: Colonial Racisms in the Postcolonial Metropolis-- Ana Paula Ferreira 3. Love Is All You Need: Lusophone Affective Communities after Freyre-- Anna M. Klobucka PART II: EMPIRE OF THE LENSES: CINEMA AND THE POST/COLONIAL GAZE 4. Filming Women in the Colonies: Gender Roles in New State Cinema about the Empire-- Patricia Vieira 5. Colonial Masculinities under a Woman's Gaze in Margarida in Margarida Cardoso's A Costa dos Murmurios-- Mark Sabine 6. Making War on the Isle of Love: Screening Camoes in Manoel de Oliveira's Non, ou a Va Gloria de Mandar-- Hilary Owen PART III: POSTCOLONIALITY AND GENDER POLITICS IN VISUAL ARTS 7. Not Your Mother's Milk: Imagining the Wet Nurse in Brazil-- Kimberly Cleveland 8. Salazar's Boots: Women, Power and Authority in the Work of Paula Rego-- Memory Holloway 9. A Turma do Perere: Visualizations of Gender in a Brazilian Children's Comic-- Elise Dietrich PART IV: HEROES, ANTI-HEROES, AND THE MYTH OF POWER 10. Karingana Wa Karingana: Representations of the Heroic Female in Mozambique-- Maria Tavares 11. Gender, Species and Coloniality in Maria Velho da Costa-- Maria Irene Ramalho 12. Restelo Redux: Heroic Masculinity and the Return of the Repressed Empire in As Naus-- Steven Gonzagowski.
[NT 15000229] null:
Analyzing a wide body of cultural texts, including literature, film, and other visual arts, Gender, Empire, and Postcolony: Luso-Afro-Brazilian Intersections is a diverse collection of essays on gender in Portuguese colonialism and Lusophone postcolonialism.
电子资源:
Online journal 'available contents' page
Gender, empire, and postcolony[electronic resource] :luso-Afro-Brazilian intersections /
Owen, Hilary,
Gender, empire, and postcolony
luso-Afro-Brazilian intersections /[electronic resource] :Edited by Hilary Owen, Anna M. Klobucka. - 1st ed. - Basingstoke :Palgrave Macmillan :2014. - 240 p. :13 b&w, ill.
Electronic book text.
Introduction: Anna M. Klobucka and Hilary Owen PART I: LUSOTROPICALIST AFFECT AND ANTI-IMPERIAL ETHICS 1. Pessoa's Works on the Self: Toward an Anti-Imperial Askesis-- Leela Gandhi, 2. Lusotropicalist Entanglements: Colonial Racisms in the Postcolonial Metropolis-- Ana Paula Ferreira 3. Love Is All You Need: Lusophone Affective Communities after Freyre-- Anna M. Klobucka PART II: EMPIRE OF THE LENSES: CINEMA AND THE POST/COLONIAL GAZE 4. Filming Women in the Colonies: Gender Roles in New State Cinema about the Empire-- Patricia Vieira 5. Colonial Masculinities under a Woman's Gaze in Margarida in Margarida Cardoso's A Costa dos Murmurios-- Mark Sabine 6. Making War on the Isle of Love: Screening Camoes in Manoel de Oliveira's Non, ou a Va Gloria de Mandar-- Hilary Owen PART III: POSTCOLONIALITY AND GENDER POLITICS IN VISUAL ARTS 7. Not Your Mother's Milk: Imagining the Wet Nurse in Brazil-- Kimberly Cleveland 8. Salazar's Boots: Women, Power and Authority in the Work of Paula Rego-- Memory Holloway 9. A Turma do Perere: Visualizations of Gender in a Brazilian Children's Comic-- Elise Dietrich PART IV: HEROES, ANTI-HEROES, AND THE MYTH OF POWER 10. Karingana Wa Karingana: Representations of the Heroic Female in Mozambique-- Maria Tavares 11. Gender, Species and Coloniality in Maria Velho da Costa-- Maria Irene Ramalho 12. Restelo Redux: Heroic Masculinity and the Return of the Repressed Empire in As Naus-- Steven Gonzagowski.
Document
Analyzing a wide body of cultural texts, including literature, film, and other visual arts, Gender, Empire, and Postcolony: Luso-Afro-Brazilian Intersections is a diverse collection of essays on gender in Portuguese colonialism and Lusophone postcolonialism.Gender, Empire, and Postcolony: Luso-Afro-Brazilian Intersections is a collection of essays on gender in Portuguese colonialism and Lusophone postcolonialism. The contributors engage systematically with postcolonial and gender theory as they examine the diverse universe of cultural production that has directed itself to Lusophone colonial and postcolonial experience and legacy, including literature, cinema, and other visual arts. The volume builds on existing critiques of Lusotropicalism while affording important new space for Lusophone dialogue with mainstream postcolonial theory. Beyond its core audience of Luso-Afro-Brazilian studies specialists, Gender, Empire, and Postcolony will interest scholars and students of colonial history and postcolonial theory; African and Latin American studies; and film studies and art history.
PDF.
Hilary Owen is Professor of Portuguese and Luso-African Studies at the University of Manchester, UK. She is the author or editor of several books, including Mother Africa, Father Marx: Women's Writing of Mozambique, 1948-2002, and (with Phillip Rothwell) Sexual/Textual Empires: Gender and Marginality in Lusophone African Literature. Anna M. Klobucka is Professor of Portuguese and Women's and Gender Studies at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, USA. She is the author or editor of several books, including The Portuguese Nun: Formation of a National Myth (2000) and (with Mark Sabine) Embodying Pessoa: Corporeality, Gender, Sexuality (2007).
ISBN: 1137340991 (electronic bk.) :£57.50Subjects--Topical Terms:
579072
African literature (Portuguese)
--History and criticism--20th century.
LC Class. No.: PQ9055 / .G46 2014
Dewey Class. No.: 869.09981
Gender, empire, and postcolony[electronic resource] :luso-Afro-Brazilian intersections /
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Introduction: Anna M. Klobucka and Hilary Owen PART I: LUSOTROPICALIST AFFECT AND ANTI-IMPERIAL ETHICS 1. Pessoa's Works on the Self: Toward an Anti-Imperial Askesis-- Leela Gandhi, 2. Lusotropicalist Entanglements: Colonial Racisms in the Postcolonial Metropolis-- Ana Paula Ferreira 3. Love Is All You Need: Lusophone Affective Communities after Freyre-- Anna M. Klobucka PART II: EMPIRE OF THE LENSES: CINEMA AND THE POST/COLONIAL GAZE 4. Filming Women in the Colonies: Gender Roles in New State Cinema about the Empire-- Patricia Vieira 5. Colonial Masculinities under a Woman's Gaze in Margarida in Margarida Cardoso's A Costa dos Murmurios-- Mark Sabine 6. Making War on the Isle of Love: Screening Camoes in Manoel de Oliveira's Non, ou a Va Gloria de Mandar-- Hilary Owen PART III: POSTCOLONIALITY AND GENDER POLITICS IN VISUAL ARTS 7. Not Your Mother's Milk: Imagining the Wet Nurse in Brazil-- Kimberly Cleveland 8. Salazar's Boots: Women, Power and Authority in the Work of Paula Rego-- Memory Holloway 9. A Turma do Perere: Visualizations of Gender in a Brazilian Children's Comic-- Elise Dietrich PART IV: HEROES, ANTI-HEROES, AND THE MYTH OF POWER 10. Karingana Wa Karingana: Representations of the Heroic Female in Mozambique-- Maria Tavares 11. Gender, Species and Coloniality in Maria Velho da Costa-- Maria Irene Ramalho 12. Restelo Redux: Heroic Masculinity and the Return of the Repressed Empire in As Naus-- Steven Gonzagowski.
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Gender, Empire, and Postcolony: Luso-Afro-Brazilian Intersections is a collection of essays on gender in Portuguese colonialism and Lusophone postcolonialism. The contributors engage systematically with postcolonial and gender theory as they examine the diverse universe of cultural production that has directed itself to Lusophone colonial and postcolonial experience and legacy, including literature, cinema, and other visual arts. The volume builds on existing critiques of Lusotropicalism while affording important new space for Lusophone dialogue with mainstream postcolonial theory. Beyond its core audience of Luso-Afro-Brazilian studies specialists, Gender, Empire, and Postcolony will interest scholars and students of colonial history and postcolonial theory; African and Latin American studies; and film studies and art history.
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Gender, Empire, and Postcolony is an outstanding collection of essays written by many prominent figures in the field of Lusophone Studies. It centers on cultural production in the realms of literature, cinema, painting, photography, sculpture, and comic books that highlights complex gendered dynamics operating at various junctures throughout the history of the Portuguese empire, as well as in its aftermath in Portugal, Mozambique, and Brazil. While individual essays are theoretically sophisticated, the volume as a whole opens new and exciting avenues of inquiry that will shape the field for years to come. - Fernando Arenas, Professor of Lusophone African, Portuguese, and Brazilian Studies, University of Michigan, USA.
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Hilary Owen is Professor of Portuguese and Luso-African Studies at the University of Manchester, UK. She is the author or editor of several books, including Mother Africa, Father Marx: Women's Writing of Mozambique, 1948-2002, and (with Phillip Rothwell) Sexual/Textual Empires: Gender and Marginality in Lusophone African Literature. Anna M. Klobucka is Professor of Portuguese and Women's and Gender Studies at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, USA. She is the author or editor of several books, including The Portuguese Nun: Formation of a National Myth (2000) and (with Mark Sabine) Embodying Pessoa: Corporeality, Gender, Sexuality (2007).
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