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Jonathan Bishop Highfield : Imagined Topographies: From Colonial Resource to Postcolonial Homeland (Postcolonial Studies)
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Author: Jonathan Bishop Highfield
Title: Imagined Topographies: From Colonial Resource to Postcolonial Homeland (Postcolonial Studies)
Moochable copies: No copies available
Topics:
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Published in: English
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 192
Date: 2012-10-30
ISBN: 1433119870
Publisher: Peter Lang Publishing
Weight: 0.8 pounds
Size: 6.1 x 8.9 x 0.6 inches
Amazon prices:
$39.99used
$39.99new
$79.95Amazon
Description: Product Description
One important legacy of colonialism is the separation of a culture from the land upon which its people live. Populations are displaced; topographical objects are renamed, and the land becomes a resource to be exploited. Starting with three landscapes viewed as threatening by the Europeans who colonized them, Imagined Topographies examines the ways artists, writers, and musicians distill new meaning in formerly colonized spaces through the articulation of landscapes that are homelands, not commodities. In the Irish bog Seamus Heaney explores legacies of violence, John Dunne looks at rural poverty and religious faith, and Catherine Harper creates art connecting landscape and gender. Influenced by the Amazon, Wilson Harris creates dense multi-layered Guyanese epics, Karen Tei Yamashita plays with the telenovela to explore the role of multinational corporations in deforestation, and in recordings Douglas Quin combines the natural world with the technological, raising questions of connected cultural and natural loss. The two landscapes of Australia, the empty land of the colonizers and the fertile land known by the original inhabitants, are explored in the novels of David Malouf, while Peter Carey turns to the animal world to define the Australian national character, and the people of Ramingining, in films and a website created in collaboration with the filmmaker Rolf de Heer, intervene in the Australian land rights struggle. Challenging the dominant perceptions of land in these regions, artists, musicians, and writers create new visions of landscapes tied to cultures where social and ecological justice offer choices other than emigration and habitat destruction.
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