Eddie Yeghiayan
Baack, Donald and Thomas Prasch. "The Death of the Subject and the Life of the Organization: Implications of New Approaches to Subjectivity for Organizational Analysis." Journal of Management Inquiry (June 1997), 6(2): 134-135, 140n6, 141.
Babcock, Barbara A.
"Feminisms/Pretexts: Fragments, Questions, and
Reflections."
Anthropological Quarterly (April 1993),
66(2):60, 66.
Quoting Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's "Displacement and the Discourse of
Woman" (1983) and citing a phrase from Rousseau about the
'disorder of
women' says: "Much more recently one of these disorderly postmodern women
has replied that 'the discourse of man is in the metaphor of woman'."
This issue is on "Constructing Meaningful Dialogue on Difference: Feminism
and Postmodernism in Anthropology and the Academy, Part I," edited by
Frances E. Mascia-Lees and Patricia Sharpe.
Bach, Alice.
"Signs of the Flesh: Observations on
Characterization in the Bible."
Semeia: An Experimental Journal for Biblical
Criticism
(1993), 63:62,
79.
Issue is on "Characterization in Biblical Literature," edited by
Elizabeth Struthers Malbon and Adele Berlin.
Backscheider, Paula R. "'Endless Aversion Rooted in the Soul': Divorce in the 1690-1730 Theater." Eighteenth Century: Theory and Interpretation (Summer 1996), 37(2): 133-134n79.
Bagchi, Alaknanda.
"Conflicting Nationalisms:
The Voice of the Subaltern in Mahasweta Devi's Bashai
Tudu."
Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature
(Spring 1996), 15(1):
41-42, 49nn1, 2, 49-50n13.
Quotes Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's description of Devi's works as
containing "problematic representations of decolonization."
This article is part of a Forum on "After Empire."
This issue is entitled "'Beyond' Gynocriticism and Gynesis: The
Geographics
of Identity and the Future of Feminist Criticism," edited by Susan
Stanford
Friedman.
Bagchi, Nivedita.
"The Process of Validation in Relation to
Materiality and Historical Reconstruction in Amitav Ghosh's The
Shadow Lines." MFS: Modern Fiction
Studies
(Spring 1993), 39(1):202.
This issue is on "Fiction of the Indian Subcontinent,"
edited by Aparajita Sagar.
Bahri, Deepika. "Marginally Off-Center: Postcolonialism in The Teaching Machine." College English (March 1997), 59(3): 279, 283, 291, 298.
Bahri, Deepika.
"Once More with Feeling: What Is
Postcolonialism?"
Ariel: A Review of International English Literature
(January 1995), 26(1):
51, 54, 59, 63, 65, 68, 70, 71, 72, 76, 78n3, 79nn16, 23, 25, 81.
Issue is entitled "Postcolonialism and Its Discontents."
Bahri, Deepika and Mary Vasudeva. "Transnationality and Multiculturalist Ideology: Interview With Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak." In Deepika Bahri and Mary Vasudeva, eds., Between the Lines: South Asians and Post-Coloniality, pp. 64-89. Philadelphia, Pa: Temple University Press, 1996.
Baker, David J. "'Wildehirissheman': Colonialist Representation in Shakespeare's Henry V." English Literary Renaissance (Winter 1992), 22(1): 56.
Bal, Mieke.
"First Person, Second Person, Same Person:
Narrative as Epistemology."
New Literary History: A Journal of Theory &
Interpretation
(Spring 1993), 24(2):
317, 320.
Refers to Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's distinction between self,
self-consolidating other, and absolute other.
Bal, Mieke.
"Semiotic Elements in Academic Practices."
Critical Inquiry
(Spring 1996), 22(3):
583-584.
Gives Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's definition of catachresis.
Baldick, Chris. Criticism and Literary Theory 1890 to the Present, pp. 176, 185-186. Longman Literature in English Series. London & New York: Longman, 1996.
Balkir, Irem. "Henry James, and the 'Imperial Feeling'." American Studies International (October 1995), 33(2): 28, 29n3, 31n24.
Ball, John Clement. "The Semi-Detached Metropolis: Hanif Kureishi's London." Ariel: A Review of International English Literature (October 1996), 27(4): 25n4, 27.
Balsamo, Anne.
"Feminism and Cultural Studies."
Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association
(Spring 1991), 24(1):66, 73n45.
This issue is on the topic "Cultural Studies and the New Historicism."
Bandlamudi, Lakshmi.
"Developmental Discourse as an Author/Hero
Relationship."
Culture & Psychology
(March 1999), 5(1):
58, 64.
Cites Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's criticisms of Hegel's narrative on the
development of art forms.
Banham, Gary. Review of Bernd Magnus and Stephen Cullenberg, eds., Whither Marxism? Global Crises in International Perspective (1994) and Christopher Bertram and Andrew Chitty, eds. Has History Ended. Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology (January 1997), 28(1): 105-106.
Barber, Karin.
"African Language Literature and Postcolonial
Criticism."
Research in African Literature
(Winter 1995), 26(4):
4, 5, 25, 29-30.
Quotes Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's observations regarding the need to
become inter-literary: "since the teaching of English literature can
become
critical only if it is intimately yoked to the teaching of the literary or
cultural production in the mother tongue(s)."
Bardsley, Jackie. "Purchasing Power in Japanese Popular Culture." Journal of Popular Culture (Fall 1997), 31(2): 20n3, 22.
Barker, Francis, Peter Hulme, and Margaret Iversen. "Introduction." In Francis Barker, Peter Hulme, and Margaret Iversen, eds., Colonial Discourse/Postcolonial Theory, pp. 1, 5-6, 14-15, 18-19. The Essex Symposia, Literature, Politics, Theory. Manchester & New York: Manchester University Press, 1994.
Barlow, Damien.
"Authenticity/Hybridity and Pallawah Identities
in
Castro's Drift."
Southerly: A Review of Australian Literature
(Winter 1998), 58(2):
59, 66n6.
Uses Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's notion of "epistemic
violence."
Barnett, Clive. "Impure and Worldly Geography: The Africanist Discourse of the Royal Geographical Society, 1831-73." Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers (1998), 23(2):249n5, 251.
Barnett, Clive.
"Peddling Postmodernism: A Response to
Strohmayer and Hannah's 'Domesticating Postmodernism'."
Antipode (October 1993), 25(4):
354, 358.
The article referred to in the title was published in
Antipode
(1992), 24:
29-55.
Cites Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's
"Can the Subaltern Speak?" and quotes her
remark that her distinction between the two senses of representation are
"related but irreducibly discontinuous."
Barnett, Clive. "'Sing Along with the Common People': Politics, Postcolonialism, and Other Figures." Environment and Planning D: Society & Space (April 1997), 15(2):137.
Barnett. Clive. "Why Theory?" Review of Derek Gregory's Geographical Imaginations. Economic Geography (October 1995), 71(4): 433, 435.
Barney, Richard A.
"Introduction: Subjectivity, the
Novel, and the
Bildung Blocks of Critical Theory."
Genre: Forms of Discourse and Culture (Winter 1993), 26(4):
369, 373, 375.
Issue is on "Education, Identity, and Constructions of the Novel,"
edited by Richard A. Barney.
Barr, Tina. "Divine Politics, Virginia Woolf's Journey toward Eleusis in To The Lighthouse." Boundary 2: An International Journal of Literature and Culture (Spring 1993), 20(1): 127n5.
Barratt, Barnaby B.
"On Ancient Terrors and Tragic Heroes: A
Response
to Rubens."
New Ideas in Psychology
(November 1992), 10(3):
379, 380.
Comments on Richard L. Rubens' "Psychoanalysis
and the Tragic Sense of Life." New Ideas in
Psychology
(November 1992), 10(3):347-362.
Barratt, Barnaby B. and Barrie Ruth Straus. "Notes on Postmodernism and the Psychology of Gender." American Psychologist (October 1989), 44(10): 1329, 1330.
Barrett, Lindon. "Hand-Writing: Legibility and the White Body in Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom." American Literature: A Journal of Literary History, Criticism, and Bibliography (June 1997), 69(2): 328, 336nn26, 28.
Barrett, Lindon. "'In the Dark': Billie Holiday and Some Sights and Sounds of American Value." Callaloo: A Journal of African-American and African Arts and Letters (Autumn 1990), 13(4): 880, 885n12.
Bartolovich, Crystal.
"The Work of Cultural Studies in the Age of
Transnational Production."
Minnesota Review: A Journal of Committed Writing
(Fall-Spring 1996), 45-46:
118, 146.
Issue is entitled "The Institution of Literature. III. Institutional
Questions."
Barzilai, Shuli.
"The Politics of Quotation in
To The Lighthouse: Mrs. Woolf Resites Mr.Tennyson and Mr.
Cowper."
Literature and Psychology (1995),
41(3):
41n13, 43.
Refers to Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's essay "Unmaking and Making in
To the Lighthouse" (1980).
Barzilai, Shuli and Morton W. Bloomfield.
"New Criticism and Deconstructive Criticism, or
What's New?"
New Literary History: A Journal of Theory &
Interpretation
(Autumn 1986), 18(1):
168n17.
Issue is on "Studies in Historical Change."
Basu, Biman. "Public and Private Discourses and the Black Female Subject: Gayl Jones' Eva's Man." Callaloo: A Journal of African-American and African Arts and Letters (Winter 1996), 19(1):199, 206.
Batterbury, Simon, Timothy Forsyth, and Kay Thomson. "Environmental Transformations in Developing Countries: Hybrid Research and Democratic Policy." Geographical Journal (July 1997), 163(2): 129, 132.
Baucom, Ian. "Mournful Histories: Narratives of Postimperial Melancholy." MFS:Modern Fiction Studies (Summer 1996), 42(2): 267, 288.
Bauer, Dale M. "The Other 'F' Word: The Feminist in the Classroom." College English (April 1990), 52(4): 387, 396.
Bauer, Ralph.
"Criticism on the Boundary: Postcoloniality and
the
'Worlding' of Literature."
Centennial Review (Fall 1998),
42(3):
403, 416.
Special Issue on "Locations of Culture: Identity, Home, Theory,"
edited by Ralph Bauer.
Baum, Bruce. "J. S. Mill on Freedom and Power." Polity (Winter 1998), 31(2): 214n81.
Bauman, Emily.
"Re-Dressing Colonial Discourse: Postcolonial
Theory and the Humanist Project."
Critical Quarterly
(Autumn 1998), 40(3):
84, 88n10.
The subaltern cannot speak because
"she is necessarily imbricated in colonialist
knowledges, language not being separable from epistemology."
Bayard, Caroline. "From Nègres blancs d'Amérique' (1968) to 'Kanesatake' (1990): A Look at the Tensions of Postmodern Quebec." WLWE: World Literature Written in English (Autumn 1990), 30(2): 18, 27.
Beattie, Valerie. "The Mystery at Thornfield: Representations of Madness in Jane Eyre." Studies in the Novel (Winter 1996), 28(4): 504n12.
Beddoes, Julie.
"Mastering the Mother Tongue: Reading Frank
Davey
Reading Daphne Marlatt's How Hug a Stone."
Canadian Literature
(Winter 1997), 155:
75, 76, 83.
The epigraph of the article is the following quote from Gayatri
Chakravorty Spivak: "…the critique of essentialism is understood not as an
exposure of error, our own or others', but as an acknowledgment of the
dangerousness of something one cannot not use." Also quotes Gayatri
Chakravorty Spivak on "catachresis" and "mother tongue."
Bell, Steven M. "Literature, Self-Consciousness, and Writing: The Example of Barth's Lost in the Funhouse." International Fiction Review (Summer 1984), 11(2): 84n3, 89.
Bellamy, Elizabeth Jane.
"'Intimate Enemies': Psychoanalysis, Marxism, and Postcolonial
Affect."
South Atlantic Quarterly
(Spring 1998) 97(2):
341-359.
Issue is on "Psycho-Marxism and Psychoanalysis
Late in the Twentieth-Century,"
edited by Robert Miklitsch.
Belnap, Jeffrey Grant.
"The Post-Colonial State and the 'Hybrid'
Intellect: Carpentier, Ngugi, and Spivak."
PhD Dissertation, University of California, Irvine 1993.
Abstract in Dissertation Abstracts International
(May 1994),
54(11A):4081-A.
Belsey, Catherine and Jane Moore. "Introduction: The Story So Far." In Catherine Belsey and Jane Moore, eds., The Feminist Reader: Essays in Gender and the Politics of Literary Criticism, pp. 17-18. New York: Blackwell, 1989.
Bennett, Andrew and Nicholas Royle. Introduction to Literature, Criticism and Theory, pp. 15, 170, 201, 291. 2nd edition. London & New York: Prentice-Hall Europe, 1999.
Bennett, Susan.
"Subject to the Tourist Gaze: A Response to
'Weesageechak Begins to
Dance'."
TDR: The Drama Review: A Journal of Performance
Studies
(Spring 1993), 37(1) [137]:
9, 13.
Quotes the following from Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak: "It seems to me that
the politics involved in presupposing the heterogeneity of one's own
[cultural identity…] and the homogeneity of the other is something that
one should examine."
Letter in response to Jennifer Preston's "Weesageechak Begins to Dance."
TDR: The Drama Review: A Journal of Performance
Studies
(Spring 1992), 36(1):
135-159.
Bennington, Geoffrey. "Deconstruction and the Philosophers (the Very Idea)." Oxford Literary Review (1988), 10(1-2): 99-100, 126n53, 127n66.
Benstock, Shari. "From Letters to Literature: La Carte Postale in the Epistolary Genre." Genre: A Quarterly Devoted to Generic Criticism (Fall 1985), 18(3): 293n12.
Berg, Lawrence D. "Between Modernism and Postmodernism." Progress in Human Geography: An International Review of Geographical Work in the Social Sciences and Humanities (December 1993), 17(4): 504, 507.
Berg, Lawrence D. and Robin A. Kearns. "America Unlimited. " Environment and Planning D: Society & Space (April 1998), 16(2): 129, 132.
Berg, Maggie.
"Luce Irigaray's 'Contradictions':
Poststructuralism and Feminism."
Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society
(Fall 1991), 17(1):
61n68, 63.
Cites Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's "Translator's Preface" to
Derrida's
Of Grammatology (1976) and her criticisms of
Kristeva.
Berger, Maurice.
"The Cave." On Yvonne Rainer's
Privilege.
Artforum
(November 1990), 29(3):
28.
To support the idea of the open view that sees real sociological benefits
of
intercultural studies quotes Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, who says:
"Can men theorize feminism, can whites theorize racism, can the bourgeois
theorize revolution….It is when only the former groups theorize that the
situation is politically intolerable….The position that only the subaltern
can know the subaltern, only women can know women and so on, cannot be
held as a theoretical presupposition either, for it predicates the
possibility of knowledge on identity."
Bergren, Anne.
Review of Pietro Pucci's Hesiod and the Language of Poetry.
MLN: Modern Language Notes
(December 1978), 93(5):1065n7.
Refers to Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's "Translator's Preface" to
Derrida's Of Grammatology (1976).
Bergero, Adriana J. "De tesoros, mercados y prestidigitadores: Reflexiones sobre la representación de América Latina." Mester (Fall 1992), 21(2): 166-167n2, 169.
Berlant, Lauren. "America, 'Fat,' the Fetus." Boundary 2: An International Journal of Literature and Culture (Fall 1994), 21(3): 154, 155n12.
Berlant, Lauren.
"The Queen of America Goes to Washington City:
Harriet Jacobs, Frances Harper, Anita Hill."
American Literature
(September 1993), 65(3):
568, 574n22.
"Thus in one light the show's [Designing Woman episode
entitled 'The Strange Case of Clarence and Anita'] stifling of Hill
reproduces a version of the imperial fantasy Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak
describes, in which white women 'heroically' save brown women from brown
and white men."
Berlant, Lauren.
"'68, or Something."
Critical Inquiry
(Autumn 1994), 21(1):
127n8, 141.
Quotes Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's assertion that "we learn the
inscription of identity letter by letter."
Berman, Russell A. "Troping to Pretoria: The Rise and Fall of Deconstruction." Telos: A Quarterly Journal of Critical Thought (Fall 1990), 85: 16.
Berry, Chris.
"A Nation T(w/o)o: Chinese
Cinema(s) and Nationhood(s)."
East-West Film Journal
(January 1993), 7(1):
47n1, 50.
Special Issue on "Cinema and Nationhood."
Berry, Philippa.
"Kristeva's Feminist Refiguring of the
Gift."
Paragraph (November 1995), 18(3):
232, 240n25.
Refers to Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's "Glas-Piece: A Compte
Rendu" (1977).
Best, B. "Postcolonialism and the Deconstructive Scenario: Representing Gayatri Spivak." Environment and Planning D: Society & Space (August 1999), 17 (4): 475-494.
Beverley, John.
"Does the Project of the
Left Have a Future?"
Boundary 2: An International Journal of Literature and
Culture (Spring 1997), 24(1):41, 46-47.
Quotes Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's assertion that "non-Eurocentric
globe-girdling movements of Ecology, Bio-Diversity, Women, and Alternative
Development" constitute "the new face of
socialism."
Beverley, John.
"Introduction&.quot; Revista
de Crítica Literaria Latinoamericana
(1992), 18(36):
7, 9, 18nn1, 2, 5.
The article begins with the following: "'¿Pueda hablar el subaltern?'
pregunta Gayatri Spivak en una intervención ya famosa."
Points out that Spanish equivalent of the term "subaltern" (in the
Gramscian sense) is "el pueblo."
This is the introduction to the issue that is entitled "La voz del
otro:
testimonio, subalternidad y verdad narrativa," edited by John
Beverley and Hugo Achugar.
Beverley, John.
"The Real Thing (Our Rigoberta)."
Modern Language Quarterly
(June 1996), 57(2):
131-132.
Discusses what Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak was trying to show in answering
in the negative "Can the Subaltern Speak?"
This is a Special Issue on "The Places of History: Regionalism
Revisited in Latin America," edited by Doris Sommer.
Beverley, John. Subalternity and Representation: Arguments in Cultural Theory, pp. ix, 27, 16, 29, 31, 37, 66-67, 69-71, 75, 82-83, 87-88, 100-104, 106, 122, 135, 142, 148-149, 152, 169n1, 172n9, 179n7, 182nn6-7, 184nn22, 24. Post-Contemporary Interventions. Durham, NC & London: Duke University Press, 1999.
Beverley, John. "El testimonio en la encrucijada." Revista Iberoamericana (July-December 1993), 59(164-165): 485.
Beverly, John.
"'Through All Things Modern': Second Thoughts on Testimonio."
Boundary 2: An International Journal of Literature and
Culture
(Summer 1991), 18(2):
4, 11.
Quotes Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak on the subaltern not speaking, and says
that to have it speak would be like "Godot arriving on a bus."
Bewell, Alan. "Jane Eyre and Victorian Medical Geography." ELH: English Literary History (Fall 1996), 63(3): 781, 806nn23, 29, 807n44.
Bhabha, Homi. "The Other Question." In Padmini Mongia, ed., Contemporary Postcolonial Theory: A Reader, p. 53n4. London: Arnold, 1996.
Bhabha, Homi. "Postcolonial Criticism." In Stephen Greenblatt and Giles Gunn, eds., Redrawing the Boundaries: The Transformation of English and American Literary Studies, pp. 440, 449-450, 460, 463n2, 464, 465. New York: Modern Language Association of America, 1992.
Bharucha, Rustom.
"Under the Sign of the Onion: Intracultural
Negotiations in Theatre." New Theatre Quarterly (May
1996), 12(46):129n6.
"Addressing the criticism that her radical translations of Mahasweta
Devi's stories are not 'sufficiently accessible to readers in India',
Gayatri
Spivak has acknowledged that the English of her translations 'belongs more
to the rootless American-based academic prose than the more subcontinental
idiom of her youth'. But she then poses an 'interesting question' unique
to India: 'should Indian texts be translated into the
English of the subcontinent?'."
Bhatia, Nandi.
"Women, Homelands, and the Indian
Diaspora."
Centennial Review
(Fall 1998), 42(3):
512, 524n4, 526.
Special Issue on "Locations of Culture: Identity, Home, Theory,"
edited by Ralph Bauer.
Bhattacharya, Nandini. "Behind the Veil: The Many Masks of Subaltern Sexuality." Women's Studies International Forum (May-June 1996), 19(3): 283, 291n1, 292.
Bhattacharya, Nandini. "Ethnopolitical Dynamics and the Language of Gendering in Dryden's Aureng Zebe." Cultural Critique (Fall 1993), 25: 171n9, 175.
Bhattacharya, Nandini.
"Postcolonial
Agency in Teaching Toni Morrison."
Cultural Studies.
(May 1995), 9(2):
230, 232-233, 234, 237, 246.
Special Issue: "Toni Morrison and the Curriculum," edited by
Warren Crichlow and Cameron McCarthy.
Bickford, Susan. "Reconfiguring Pluralism: Identity and Institutions in the Inegalitarian Polity." American Journal of Political Science (January 1999), 43(1): 87, 108.
Biddick, Kathleen. "Decolonizing the English Past: Readings in Medieval Archaeology and History." Journal of British Studies (January 1993), 32(1): 5n9, 17n33.
Biddick, Kathleen.
"Genders, Bodies,
Borders Technologies of the Visible."
Speculum: A Journal of Medieval Studies
(April 1993), 68(2):
392n9.
Citing Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's "The Rani
of
Sirmur: An Essay on Reading the Archives" (1985) says:
"Recent critical work in postorientalist history deeply troubles
conventional uses of 'experience' as a historical category."
Issue is on "Contemporary Critical Theories on Women and Feminism in
Medieval History."
Biddick, Kathleen.
"Humanist History and the Haunting of Virtual
Words: Problems of Memory and Rememoration." Genders
(Winter 1993), 18:
63n12.
Issue is entitled "Cyberpunk: Technologies of Cultural Identity," edited
by Thomas Foster.
Biesecker, Barbara A.
"Coming to Terms with Recent Attempts to Write
Women into the History of Rhetoric."
Philosophy and Rhetoric
(1992), 25(2):
148, 158n1, 159nn11, 12, 25, 160nn31, 40, 42, 43.
This essay is dedicated to Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak.
Biesecker, Barbara.
"Michel Foucault, and the Question of
Rhetoric."
Philosophy and Rhetoric
(1992), 25(4):
355-356, 360, 363n14, 364n34.
Quotes Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak at length on the meanings of "pouvoir"
in
Foucault that are not captured by its translation as "power."
Biesecker, Barbara.
"Negotiating with Our Tradition: Reflecting
Again (Without Apologies) on the Feminization of Rhetoric."
Philosophy and Rhetoric
(1993), 26(3):
237, 241n6.
Says that her work in "Coming to Terms…" was governed by lessons learned
from
Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's work on the gendered subaltern on the way to
counteract Western, Eurocentric and patriarchal historicism.
Biesecker, Barbara A. "Rethinking the Rhetorical Situation from Within the Thematic of Différance." Philosophy and Rhetoric (1989), 22(2): 118, 128n6, 129nn25-27, 35-37.
Bilimoria, Purushottama. "The Hermeneutic of Suspicion and Religion." Journal of Dharma (July-September 1997), 22(3): 268, 274.
Bilimoria, Purushottama. "Personal Law: Legal Origins and Constitutional Issues: Debates Over Uniform Civil Codes in Modern India." Journal of Dharma (October-December 1997), 22(4): 497, 522.
Binder, Wolfgang. "Finding the Right Words: The Invention of Selfhood in David Dabydeen's Work." In Alfred Hornung and Ernstpeter Ruhe, eds., Postcolonialism & Autobiography: Michelle Cliff, David Dabydeen, Opal Palmer Adisa, pp. 143, 147. Text, 19. Amsterdam & Atlanta, GA: Rodopi, 1998.
Birkle, Carmen. "Colonial Mother and Potcolonial Daughter: Pocahontas and Clare Savage in Michelle Cliff's No Telephone to Heaven." In Alfred Hornung and Ernstpeter Ruhe, eds., Postcolonialism & Autobiography: Michelle Cliff, David Dabydeen, Opal Palmer Adisa, p. 73. Text, 19. Amsterdam & Atlanta, GA: Rodopi, 1998.
Bishop, P. "Rhetoric, Memory, and Power: Depth Psychology and Postmodern Geography." Environment and Planning D: Society & Space (February 1992), 10(1): 6, 22.
Blain, Virginia. "Double Vision and the Double Standard in Bleak House: A Feminist Perspective." Literature and History (Spring 1985), 11(1): 46n31.
Blanchard, Marc.
"His Master's Voice."
Studies in the Literary Imagination
(Spring 1992), 25 (1):
68, 72-74, 77nn18, 19.
Discusses at length Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's "A Literary
Representation of the Subaltern: A Woman's Text from the Third World"
(1987), and citing "Can the Subaltern Speak?" (1988)
observes:
"'subaltern'
not only designates a lower status in the context of a dominant/dominated
discourse ideology. It also implies complex mechanisms of resistance to
cultural homogenizing which runs underneath the surface of coercive
rhetoric and open up new ways of interpreting difference and reciprocity."
This issue is entitled "After Genette: Current Directions in
Narrative Analysis and Theory."
Blier, Suzanne Preston. "Imagining Otherness in Ivory: African Portrayals of the Portuguese ca. 1492." Art Bulletin (September 1993), 75(3): 377n3.
Blythe, Martin. "'What's in a Name?': Film Culture and the Self/Other
Question."
Quarterly Review of Film and Video
(May-October 1991), 13(1-3):
211, 212, 215.
Issue is on "Discourse of the Other: Postcoloniality, Positionality,
and Subjectivity," edited by Hamid Naficy and Teshome H. Gabriel.
Boa, Elizabeth.
"A Young Man Plays the Ringmaster: Reply to J.M.
Hawes." Deutsche Vierteljahrsschrift für
Literaturwissenschaft und Geistesgeschichte (June 1995),
69(2):
338.
Cites Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's "Can the Subaltern Speak?" (1988).
Boesky, Amy. "'Outlandish-Fruits': Commissioning Nature for the Museum of Man." ELH: English Literary History (Summer 1991), 58(2): 330n34.
Boehmer, Elleke. Colonial and Postcolonial Literature: Migrant Metaphors, pp. 80, 227, 245. Oxford & New York: Oxford University Press, 1995.
Boheemen-Saaf, C. Van.
"Contemporary American Literary Criticism: A
Reconnaissance of Its Continental Connections."
Neophilologus: An International Journal of Modern and
Mediaeval
Language and Literature
(January 1980), 64(1):
16n8, 17, 18.
"A very good introduction to the ideas of Derrida is Gayatri
Chakravorty Spivak's 'Translator's Preface' to Of
Grammatology."
Bohls, Elizabeth A.
"Standards of Taste, Discourses of 'Race', and
the
Aesthetic Education of a Monster: Critique of Empire in
Frankenstein."
Eighteenth-Century Life
(November 1994), 18(3):23, 34nn1, 2.
Refers to Gayatry Chakravorty Spivak's call in "Three Women's Texts and a
Critique of Imperialism" (1985) "for a move way from
'isolationist
high feminism' toward critical awreness of global interconnection."
This issue is entitled quot;The South Pacific in the Eighteenth Century:
Narratives and Myths," edited by Jonathan Lamb, Robert P. Maccubbin,
and David F. Morrill.
Boisseau, T.J. "'They Called Me Bebe Bwana': A Critical Cultural Study of an Imperial Feminist." Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society (Fall 1995), 21(1): 122, 145.
Boland, Eavan. "'Daughters of Colony': A Personal Interpretation of the Place of Gender Issues in the Postcolonial Interpretation of Irish Literature." Eire-Ireland: A Journal of Irish Studies (Summer-Fall 1997), 32(2-3):13, 20.
Bondi, Liz. "In Whose Words? On Gender Identities, Knowledge and Writing Practices." Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers (1997), 22(2):256n17, 258.
Bongie, Chris. Islands and Exiles: The Creole Identities of Post/Colonial Literature, pp. 11, 14, 29, 33, 52, 181, 443n54, 468n30, 525. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1998.
Bongie, Chris. "'Lost in the Maze of Doubting: J.M. Coetzee's Foe and the Politics of (Un)likeness." MFS: Modern Fiction Studies (Summer 1993), 39(2): 269, 281.
Bonnemaison, Sarah. "The Aesthetics and Politics of French Métissage." Ecumene (October 1997), 4(4):453, 457n64. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak and Robert Young have noted the neglect in postcolonial theory of neocolonial capitalism in the third world; the author adds third world struggles over cultural production and diffusion in a neocapitalist economy to that what has been neglected.
Bonnemaison, Sarah. "Moses/Marianne Parts the Red Sea: Allegories of Liberty in the Bicentennial of the French Revolution." Environment and Planning D: Society and Space (June 1998), 16(3): 348, 365.
Booker, M. Keith. Joyce, Bakhtin and the Literary Tradition: Toward a Comparative Cultural Poetics, pp. 87, 263. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1995.
Boon, James. "Accenting Hybridity: Postcolonial Cultural Studies, a Boasian Anthropologist, and I." In John Carlos Rowe, ed., "Culture" and the Problem of the Disciplines, pp. 151-152, 161, 164n24. A Critical Theory Institute Book. New York: Columbia University Press, 1998.
Boone, Joseph A. "Vacation Cruises; or, The Homoerotics of Orientalism." PMLA: Publications of the Modern Language Association of America (January 1995), 110(1): 104n5, 107. Special Topic: "Colonialism and the Postcolonial Condition," edited by Linda Hutcheon.
Booth, Alison. "From Miranda to Prospero: The Works of Fanny Kemble." Victorian Studies (Winter 1995), 38(2): 229, 254.
Borossa, Julia. "The Migration of Psychoanalysis and the Psychoanalyst as Migrant." Oxford Literary Review (1997), 19(1-2): 87, 102n19. This issue is on "Knowledge, Learning and Migration," edited by Caroline Rooney.
Botz-Bornstein, T. "'Iki', Style, Trace: Japanese Philosophy: Shuzo Kuki and the Spirit of Hermeneutics." Philosophy East & West (October 1997), 47(4): 580n58.
Boumelha, Penny. "'And What Do the Women Do?' Jane Eyre, Jamaica and the Gentleman's House." Southern Review: Literary and Interdisciplinary Essays [Australia] (July 1988), 21(2): 112, 121n5.
Bourke, Angela. "Reading in a Woman's Death: Colonial Text and Oral Tradition in Nineteenth-Century Ireland." Feminist Studies (Fall 1995), 21(3): 561, 585n12, 586n53.
Bové, Carol Mastrangelo. "Women and Society in Literature, or Reading Kristeva and Proust." Dalhousie Review (Summer 1984), 64(2):268n4.
Bow, Leslie. "'For Every Gesture of Loyalty, There Doesn't Have to Be a Betrayal': Asian American Criticism and the Politics of Loyalty." In Judith Roof and Robyn Wiegman, eds., Who Can Speak? Authority and Critical Identity, pp.30, 41, 46, 52n16. 55. Urbana & Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1995.
Bowen, Deborah. "The Riddler Riddled: Reading the Epigraphs in John Fowles's The French Lieutenant's Woman." Journal of Narrative Technique (Winter 1995), 25(1):87, 90.
Bowlby, Rachel. "Flight Reservations." Oxford Literary Review (1988), 10(1-2):72n17.
Boyarin, Daniel.
"Jewish Cricket."
PMLA: Publications of the Modern Language Association of
America
(January 1998), 113(1):41-45.
Discusses a section entitled "Arabs and Jews" of Gayatri Chakravorty
Spivak's essay "Psychoanalysis in Left Field and Fieldworking: Examples
to Fit the Title" (1994).
Special topic of this issue is on "Ethnicity."
Boyarin, Jonathan. "Circumscribing Constitutional Identities in Kiryas Joel." Yale Law Journal (March 1997), 106(5):1544n38, 1549n72. Cites Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's "Constitutions and Culture Studies" (1990).
Boyarin, Daniel and Jonathan Boyarin. "Diaspora: Generation and the Ground of Jewish Identity." Critical Inquiry (Summer 1993), 19(4):693.
Boyer, Christopher R.
"Old Loves, New Loyalties: Agrarismo in
Michoacán, 1920-1928."
Hispanic American Historical Review
(August 1998),
78(3):454n115.
Cites Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's "Can the Subaltern Speak?"
(1988).
Boyne, Roy. "Fractured Subjectivity." History of the Human Sciences (May 1995), 8(2):66, 68.
Braidotti, Rosi. "Discontinuous Becomings:
Deleuze on the Becoming-Woman of Philosophy."
Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology
(January
1993), 24(1):
52, 55n18.
Mentions Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's criticism of Kristeva's coupling
of certain forms of female subjectiviity with certain forms of historical
consciousness as ethnocentric and an european centered sense of
history.
Braidotti, Rosi. "Comments on Felski's 'The Doxa of Difference': Working through Sexual Difference." Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society (Fall 1997), 23(1):29-30, 40.
Brannigan, John. New Historicism and Cultural Materialism, pp.72-73. Transitions. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1998.
Brantlinger, Patrick. "History
and
Empire." Victorian Literature and Culture
(1991),
19:320.
The author states that
the two main injunctions of poststructuralist
theory are: "Do not write metanarratives," and "Do not assume that you can
or should even try to represent others."
Brantlinger, Patrick. "Pensée sauvage at the MLA: Victorian Cultural Imperialism Then and Now." Victorian Newsletter (Spring 1990), 77:4n18, 5.
Bray, Matthew. "Helen Maria Williams, and Edmund Burke: Radical Critique and Complicity." Eighteenth-Century Life (May 1992), 16(2):23nn27, 29.
Breight, Curt. "Realpolitik
and Elizabethan
Ceremony: The Earl of Hertford's Entertainment of Elizabeth at Elvetham,
1591." Renaissance Quarterly (Spring 1992),
45(1):21n4, 48
Investigates the
politics of certain events/texts and uses the terms
"events/texts" because of Spivak's view that events are never not
discursively constituted.
Breitenberg, Mark. "Anxious Masculinity: Sexual Jealousy in Early Modern England." Feminist Studies (Summer 1993), 19(2):395, 398n39.
Brennan, Teresa. "Arbeitskraft
und natur als
Reproduktionskosten." Das Argument: Zeitschrift
für
Philosophie und Sozialwissenschaften (1994), 36(3)
[205]:355n3,
357.
Translated by Thomas
Laugstien.
Brennan, Teresa. "Economy for the Earth: The Labour Theory of Value without the Subject/Object Distinction." Ecological Economics (February 1997), 20(2):176, 185.
Brennan, Teresa. "Essence Against Identity." Metaphilosophy (January-April 1996), 27(1-2):94, 103.
Brennan, Teresa. "History After Lacan." Economy and Society (August 1990), 19(3):306n, 308n2, 313.
Brennan, Teresa. "Introduction." In Teresa Brennan, ed., Between Feminism and Psychoanalysis, pp.1, 12, 18, 20n2. London & New York: Routledge, 1989.
Brennan, Teresa. "Why the Time
Is Out of
Joint: Marx's Political Economy without the Subject." South
Atlantic Quarterly (Spring 1998), 97(2):266,
279n4.
Gayatri Chakravorty
Spivak analyzes the use of binary oppositions and
the subject-centered position in Marx's value theory, but still advocates
a "materialist predication."
The issue is on
"Psycho-Marxism: Marxism and Psychoanalysis Late
in the Twentieth Century," edited by Robert Miklitsch.
Brennan, Timothy. Review of Cary Nelson and Lawrence Grossberg, eds., Marxism and the Interpretation of Culture (1988), and Michael Scriven's Paul Nizan: Communist Novelist. Modern Fiction Studies (Summer 1989), 35(2):367-370.
Brevda, William. "The Double Nihilation of the Neon: Raymond Chandler's Los Angeles." Texas Studies in Literature and Language (Spring 1999), 41(1):89, 101.
Brewer, Kenneth L., Jr. "Colonial Discourse and William Makepeace Thackeray's Irish Sketch Book." Papers on Language & Literature (Summer 1993), 29(3):265,283.
Briel, Holger. "Derridas Hyperkarte: Glas." Weimarer Beiträge (1992), 38(4):486, 490, 492, 500-501n2, 502n5, 504nn14, 17, 505nn26, 33.
Briganti, Chiara. "A Bored
Spinster with a
Locked Diary: The Politics of Hysteria in In The Heart of the
Country." Research in African
Literatures
(Winter 1994), 25(4):45, 49.
On J.M Coetzee.
Part of a "Cluster on
South African Writing."
Briggs, Charles L. "Metadiscursive Practices and Scholarly Authority in Folkloristics." Journal of American Folklore (Fall 1993), 106(422):408, 433.
Brink, André. "Languages of the
Novel: A Lover's Reflections." New England
Review
[Middlebury Series] (Summer 1998), 19(3):15, 17.
Cites Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's "Can
the Subaltern Speak?"
(1988).
Brinker-Gabler, Gisela. "Andere Begegnung: Begegnung mit dem Anderen zwischen Aneignung und Enteignung." Seminar: A Journal of Germanic Studies (May 1993), 29(2):101-102, 105.
Brittin, Alice A. "Close
Encounters of the
Third World Kind: Rigoberta Menchú and Elisabeth Burgos's Me
llamo Rigoberta Menchú." Latin
American
Perspectives (Fall 1995), 22 (4) [87]:101,
102, 114.
Gives Gayatri
Chakravorty Spivak's
argument on why the subaltern cannot speak.
Issue is on
"Redefining Democracy: Cuba and Chiapas."
Britton, Celia. "Structuralist and Poststructuralist Psychoanalytic and Marxist Theories." In Raman Selden, ed., From Formalism to Poststructuralism, pp.219, 220, 438. The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism, Volume 8. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995.
Brody, Miriam. "The Haunting
of Gaudy
Night: Misreadings in a Work of Detective Fiction."
Style (Spring 1985), 19(1):100,
102, 116.
Discusses Gayatri
Chakravorty Spivak's comparison of Derrida's
conception of "trace" to Freud's.
Brodzki, Bella. "History,
Cultural Memory,
and the Tasks of Translation in T. Obinkaram Echewa's I Saw the Sky
Catch Fire." PMLA: Publications of the Modern
Language
Association of America (March 1999), 114(2):215, 220.
Cites Gayatri
Chakravorty Spivak's view that
the Western feminist
translator of Third World women's texts has to be multilingual as a
requirement of identification, and engage in the most intimate act of
reading--which is what translation is.
Bromwich, David. "Recent Work
In Literary
Criticism." Social Research (Autumn 1986),
53(3):414-415.
"A recent article in a
respected critical journal proposed that Jane
Eyre was an imperialist text…. If described as imperialist, it ought to be
described carefully."
The reference is, of
course, to "Three Women's Texts and a Critique of
Imperialism" (1985).
Brown, Brian, Peter Nolan, Paul Crawford, and Alison Lewis. "Interaction, Language and the Narrative Turn in Psychotherapy and Psychiatry." Social Science & Medicine (December 1996), 43(11):1573, 1578n49.
Brown, Chris. "Turtles all the
Way Down':
Anti-Foundationalism, Critical Theory and International Relations."
Millennium: Journal of International Studies
(Summer 1994),
23(2):223n21.
Cites Gayatri
Chakravorty Spivak's explanation of Derrida's notion of
"under erasure."
Brown, Marshall. "A Philosophical View of the Gothic Novel." Studies in Romanticism (Summer 1987), 26(2):301n45.
Brown, Susan. "Alternatives to the Missionary Position: Anna Leonowens as Victorian Travel Writer." Feminist Studies (Fall 1995), 21(3):610n4.
Brunner, José and Yoav Peled. "Das Elend des liberalen Multikulturalismus: Kymlicka und seine Kritiker." Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie (1998), 46(3):375, 391.
Brunsdon, Charlotte. "Identity in Feminist Television Criticism." Media, Culture & Society (April 1993), 15(2):314, 319.
Bryant-Bertail, Sarah. "Gender, Empire and
Body Politic as Mise-en-Scène: Mnouchkine Les
Atrides." Theatre Journal (March 1994),
46(1):1n3.
Cites "Can the
Subaltern Speak?" (1988) and says: "Spivak is perhaps
the preeminent post-colonialist, deconstructive feminist critic."
Brydon, Diana. "'The Thematic
Ancestor':
Joseph Conrad, Patrick White and Margaret Atwood." WLWE: World
Literature Written in English (1984), 24(2):387-388, 395, 396n6,
397n21.
Quotes the following
from Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak about the sort of
deconstructive practice she prefers: "its insistence that in
disclosing complicities the critic-as-subject is herself complicit with
the object of her critique; its emphasis upon 'history' and upon the
ethico-political as the 'trace' of that complicity."
Bryson, John R. "Breaking Through the A Level Effect: A First-Year Tutorial in Student Self-Reflection." Journal of Geography in Higher Education (July 1997), 21(2):166, 169.
Buchler, Ira. "Making Kinship: Framed Constructions and their Margins." Semiotica (1994), 101(3-4): 246, 319.
Büchler, Pavel and Nikos Papastergiadis. "Introduction." In Pavel Büchler and Nikos Papastergiadis, eds., Random Access 2: Ambient Fears, pp.2-3. London: Rivers Oram Press; Concord, MA: Paul and Company, 1996.
Buell, Lawrence. "In Pursuit
of
Ethics." PMLA: Publications of the Modern
Language
Association of America (January 1999), 114(1):10, 17n10,
19.
Quotes two of Gayatri
Chakravorty Spivak's observations on ethics that
it is "the experience of the impossible," and that "the whole subject-ship
of ethics is certainly male."
Buff, Rachel. "Tecumseh and
Tenskwatawa:
Myth, Historiography and Popular Memory."
Historical Reflections/Réflexions Historiques
(Spring 1995), 21 (2):280n9, 284.
Appeals to Gayatri
Chakravorty Spivak's notion of affirmative
deconstruction.
Buffington, Robert and Pablo Piccato. "Tales
of Two Women: The Narrative Construal of Porfirian Reality."
The Americas: A Quarterly Review of Inter-American
Cultural History (January 1999), 55(3):421-422.
States that Gayatri
Chakravorty Spivak argues that as women are
inserted into the historical record they are inevitably drained of their
proper identity.
Bunting, Annie.
"Theorizing Women's Cultural
Diversity in Feminist International Human Rights Strategies."
Journal of Law and Society (Spring 1993), 20(1):11, 12, 15,
20nn26, 27, 32, 36-38, 21n60, 69.
The author says the
term "'subaltern' refers
to silenced, subjugated , colonized, or oppressed groups," and that
"the Subaltern Studies group seeks to retrieve the history of
colonized peoples in India, " and quotes Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak
as saying that their aim is to make "a theory of consciousness or
culture rather than specifically a theory of change," and that
their
aim is counterhegemonic and "strategically adhering to
the essentialist notion of consciousness."
Burman, Erica. "Experience, Identities and Alliances: Jewish Feminism and Feminist Psychology." Feminism & Psychology (February 1994), 4(1):161, 173, 177.
Burman, Erica. "Innocents Abroad: Western Fantasies of Childhood and the Iconography of Emergencies." Disasters: The Journal of Disorder Studies and Management (September 1994), 18(3):250, 252.
Burman, Erica. "Local, Global or Globalized? Child Development and International Child Rights Legislation." Childhood: A Global Journal of Child Research (February 1996), 3(1):62-63, 66.
Burman, Erica. "Psychology:
Market,
Metaphor
and Metamorphosis." Culture & Psychology
(June
1997), 3(2):148, 149, 152.
Cites Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's
notion of epistemic violence.
Burton, Antoinette. "Colonial
Encounters in
Late-Victorian England: Pandita Ramabai at Cheltenham and Wantage
1883-6." Feminist Review
(Spring 1995), 49:29, 49.
This issue is entitled
"Feminist Politics - Colonial/Postcolonial
Worlds."
Burton, Antoinette. "Fearful Bodies into Disciplined Subjects: Pleasure, Romance, and the Family Drama of Colonial Reform in Mary Carpenter's Six Months in India." Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society (Spring 1995), 20(3):550. 570, 573.
Burton, Antoinette. "Recapturing Jane Eyre: Reflections on Historicizing the Colonial Encounter in Victorian Britain." Radical History Review (Winter 1996), 64:60, 61, 69n1, 70nn4, 6.
Busia, Abena P.a. "Silencing
Sycorax: On
African Colonial Discourse and the Unvoiced Female." Cultural
Critique (Winter 1990), 14:102-103.
Special Issue: "The
Construction of Gender and Modes of Social Division
II," edited by Donna Przybylowicz, Nancy Hartsock, and Pamela
McCallum.
Bustos-Aguilar, Pedro. "Mister Don't Touch the Banana: Notes On the Popularity of the Ethnosexed Body South of the Border." Critique of Anthropology (June 1995), 15(2):150, 157, 166-167nn7, 9, 170.
Butler, Judith. "Critically Queer." GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies (1993), 1(1):20, 32.
Butler, Judith. "Collected and Fractured: Response to Identities." In Henry Louis Gates, Jr. and Kwame Anthony Appiah, eds., Identities, p. 443. Chicago & London: University of Chicago Press, 1995.
Butler, Judith. "Performative Acts and Gender Constitution an Essay in Phenomenology and Feminist Theory." Theatre Journal (December 1988), 40(4):529.
Butler, Marilyn. "Feminist Criticism, Late 80s Style." TLS [Times Literary Supplement] (March 11-17, 1988), 4432:284.
Buzard, James. "Ethnography as Interruption: News From Nowhere, Narrative, and the Modern Romance of Authority." Victorian Studies (Spring 1997), 40(3):474.
Buzard, James. "Mass-Observation, Modernism,
and Auto-Ethnography." Modernism-Modernity
(September
1997), 4(3):100, 117n9.
Special Issue on
"Bodies |
Commodities | Observation."