This table maps major phases in the evolution of postcolonial thought, from anti-colonial resistance theory to contemporary decolonial frameworks.
Chronological Evolution Table
| Phase | Key Thinker | Major Work | Core Concern | Theoretical Shift |
|---|
| Anti-Colonial Revolutionary Phase (1950s–60s) | Frantz Fanon | The Wretched of the Earth | Violence, psychological colonization, national liberation | Colonialism as total structure of domination (material + psychic) |
| Albert Memmi | The Colonizer and the Colonized | Colonial dependency relationship | Ethical dualism of colonizer/colonized |
| Discourse and Representation Phase (1970s) | Edward Said | Orientalism | Knowledge-power nexus | Colonialism as epistemic construction |
| Poststructural Turn (1980s–90s) | Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak | Can the Subaltern Speak? | Subalternity, epistemic violence | Limits of representation |
| Homi K. Bhabha | The Location of Culture | Hybridity, mimicry | Ambivalence of colonial authority |
| Cultural Materialist & Linguistic Decolonization (1970s–2000s) | Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o | Decolonising the Mind | Language, neo-colonial capitalism | Decolonization of culture & education |
| Global / Decolonial Turn (2000s–present) | Walter Mignolo | The Darker Side of Western Modernity | Coloniality of power | Modernity inseparable from coloniality |
| Achille Mbembe | On the Postcolony | Necropolitics, postcolonial state | Sovereignty and death power |
Theoretical Movement Overview
| Stage | Focus | Key Question |
|---|
| Anti-colonial | Liberation struggle | How to overthrow colonial domination? |
| Discourse critique | Representation | How does knowledge sustain empire? |
| Poststructuralist | Identity instability | Can colonized subject fully speak? |
| Neo-colonial critique | Economic continuity | Why does exploitation persist after independence? |
| Decolonial/global | Coloniality of power | Is modernity itself colonial? |
II. Theory-Application Table: Linking Key Terms to Major Novels
This table demonstrates how theoretical concepts function in specific literary texts you have been working with.
Application Matrix
| Text | Relevant Concept | Theorist | Postcolonial Insight |
|---|
| Heart of Darkness | Orientalism | Said | Africa constructed as symbolic “darkness” |
| Epistemic Violence | Spivak | African silence within colonial narrative |
| Ambivalence | Bhabha | Kurtz as unstable imperial authority |
| Things Fall Apart | Counter-Discourse | Said | Writing back to imperial misrepresentation |
| Cultural Nationalism | Ngũgĩ (parallel) | Restoration of indigenous voice |
| Subalternity | Spivak | Limits of representation of marginalized groups |
| Wide Sargasso Sea | Hybridity | Bhabha | Creole identity in-between cultures |
| Epistemic Violence | Spivak | Renaming of Antoinette as colonial erasure |
| Imperial Discourse | Said | Caribbean as suppressed foundation of English domesticity |
| A Grain of Wheat | Nationalism & Betrayal | Fanon | Moral complexity of liberation struggle |
| Neo-colonial Anxiety | Ngũgĩ | Independence without structural justice |
| Petals of Blood | Dependency Theory | Neo-Marxist | Global capitalism replaces colonial rule |
| Internalized Colonialism | Fanon | Local elite reproducing imperial structures |
| Foe | Subaltern Silence | Spivak | Friday’s muteness as limit of representation |
| Mimicry & Narrative Authority | Bhabha | Colonial storytelling destabilized |
| Discourse Construction | Said | Rewriting colonial archive |
III. Integrated Conceptual Map
| Concept | Historical Phase | Literary Example |
|---|
| Colonial Representation | Said (1970s) | Heart of Darkness |
| Writing Back | 1960s–70s African Fiction | Things Fall Apart |
| Hybridity | 1990s Theory | Wide Sargasso Sea |
| Subaltern Silence | 1980s Poststructural Turn | Foe |
| Neo-colonialism | 1970s Marxist Critique | Petals of Blood |
| Decolonizing Language | Cultural Turn | Ngũgĩ’s Gikuyu novels |
Final Analytical Synthesis
The trajectory of postcolonial theory moves:
- From anti-colonial revolution (Fanon)
- To critique of imperial representation (Said)
- To interrogation of identity instability (Bhabha)
- To ethical limits of speaking for the oppressed (Spivak)
- To economic and linguistic decolonization (Ngũgĩ)
- To global coloniality of modernity (Mbembe, Mignolo)