Postcolonial literary theory examines how literature is shaped by colonial domination, imperial knowledge systems, cultural displacement, and resistance to epistemic control. It reconfigures texts as sites where power, identity, language, and history are contested after empire.
1. EDWARD SAID — Orientalism and the Construction of the “Other”
| Dimension | Position |
|---|---|
| Core focus | Western representation of the East |
| Orientation | Foundational postcolonial critique |
| Key concept | Orientalism (discourse of the “Orient”) |
| View of literature | Embedded in imperial knowledge systems |
| Method | Discourse analysis (Foucauldian influence) |
| Key works | Orientalism, Culture and Imperialism |
| Historical model | Knowledge produced through imperial power |
| Power model | Representation as domination |
| Signature trait | The “East” as Western textual construction |
Core structure:
Empire → discourse → representation → domination
2. HOMI K. BHABHA — Hybridity, Mimicry, and the Third Space
| Dimension | Position |
|---|---|
| Core focus | Cultural hybridity and identity formation |
| Orientation | Poststructural/postcolonial theory |
| Key concept | Third Space |
| View of culture | Hybrid, unstable, negotiated |
| Method | Deconstructive cultural analysis |
| Key works | The Location of Culture |
| Historical model | Colonial contact zones |
| Power model | Ambivalent and fragmented authority |
| Signature trait | Identity formed in in-between spaces |
Core structure:
Colonial encounter → hybridity → negotiation → new identity
3. GAYATRI CHAKRAVORTY SPIVAK — Subalternity and Epistemic Silence
| Dimension | Position |
|---|---|
| Core focus | Voice, representation, subalternity |
| Orientation | Marxist-feminist postcolonial theory |
| Key concept | Subaltern cannot speak |
| View of literature | Site of epistemic exclusion |
| Method | Deconstructive + Marxist critique |
| Key works | Can the Subaltern Speak? |
| Historical model | Colonial knowledge hierarchy |
| Power model | Epistemic violence |
| Signature trait | Critique of intellectual representation |
Core structure:
Power → silence → representation → epistemic violence
4. FRANTZ FANON — Colonial Violence and Psychological Alienation
| Dimension | Position |
|---|---|
| Core focus | Psychological effects of colonialism |
| Orientation | Revolutionary postcolonial theory |
| Key concept | Colonized psyche and violence |
| View of identity | Fragmented under colonial domination |
| Method | Psychoanalytic + political analysis |
| Key works | The Wretched of the Earth |
| Historical model | Colonial violence as structural |
| Power model | Physical + psychological domination |
| Signature trait | Decolonization through violence |
Core structure:
Colonial rule → psychological fracture → resistance → liberation
5. ACHILLE MBEMBE — Necropolitics and Postcolonial Sovereignty
| Dimension | Position |
|---|---|
| Core focus | Power over life and death in postcolonial states |
| Orientation | Contemporary postcolonial theory |
| Key concept | Necropolitics |
| View of culture | Spaces governed by death-power |
| Method | Political-philosophical analysis |
| Key works | On the Postcolony |
| Historical model | Postcolonial state violence |
| Power model | Sovereign control over life/death |
| Signature trait | Life structured by death economies |
Core structure:
Sovereignty → violence → control of life/death
6. BILL ASHCROFT — Postcolonial Language and “Writing Back”
| Dimension | Position |
|---|---|
| Core focus | Language, resistance, cultural rewriting |
| Orientation | Postcolonial literary theory |
| Key concept | “Writing back to the empire” |
| View of literature | Tool of resistance and redefinition |
| Method | Linguistic + cultural critique |
| Key works | The Empire Writes Back |
| Historical model | Colonial linguistic domination |
| Power model | Language as control system |
| Signature trait | Transformation of imperial language |
Core structure:
Empire → language control → rewriting → resistance
7. LEELA GANDHI — Ethical Postcolonialism and Solidarity
| Dimension | Position |
|---|---|
| Core focus | Ethics, history, colonial legacy |
| Orientation | Humanistic postcolonial theory |
| Key concept | Ethical responsibility after empire |
| View of culture | Shared but unequal histories |
| Method | Ethical-cultural analysis |
| Key works | Postcolonial Theory |
| Historical model | Moral aftermath of colonialism |
| Power model | Ethical accountability |
| Signature trait | Postcolonial ethics of care |
Core structure:
History → moral rupture → ethical responsibility
8. STRUCTURAL MAP OF POSTCOLONIAL THEORY
| Axis | Dominant Mode | Thinkers |
|---|---|---|
| Discourse & representation | Imperial knowledge systems | Said |
| Hybridity & identity | Cultural negotiation | Bhabha |
| Subaltern silence | Epistemic exclusion | Spivak |
| Psychological colonialism | Violence & trauma | Fanon |
| Sovereignty & death | Necropolitical power | Mbembe |
| Linguistic resistance | Writing back | Ashcroft |
| Ethical memory | Postcolonial responsibility | Gandhi |
CORE INTELLECTUAL STRUCTURE OF POSTCOLONIAL THEORY
Postcolonial theory redefines literature and culture as:
Sites of imperial power, epistemic control, cultural hybridity, and resistance
More precisely:
- Empire constructs knowledge through representation (Said)
- Colonial contact produces hybrid identities (Bhabha)
- Subaltern voices are structurally silenced (Spivak)
- Colonialism produces psychological and physical violence (Fanon)
- Postcolonial states reproduce death-based sovereignty (Mbembe)
- Language becomes a field of resistance and rewriting (Ashcroft)
- Ethics demands historical responsibility (Gandhi)
FINAL SYNTHESIS
Postcolonial critics collectively redefine literature as:
- A product of imperial discourse and power structures
- A site of cultural hybridity and identity conflict
- A record of silenced and marginalized voices
- A medium for resistance and rewriting of history
- A field where language itself becomes a battleground of empire
Deep structure:
Empire → discourse → identity → resistance → reconfiguration