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The Rest Write Back

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A timely collection of essays examining the legacies and politics of knowledge production and the writing-back paradigm.
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  • 21 July 2020
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In The Rest Write Back: Discourse and Decolonization, Esmaeil Zeiny brings together a collection of essays that interrogate the colonial legacies, the contemporary power structure, and the geopolitics of knowledge production. The scholars in this collection illustrate how the writing-back paradigm engages in a conversation and paves the way for a “dialogical and pluri-versal” world where the Rest is no longer excluded. Among the important features of this book is that it presents avenues for “decoloniality” and “epistemic disobedience.” This book will be of interest to scholars and students of all Social Science and Humanities disciplines but it is particularly important for those in the disciplines of sociology, postcolonial studies, cultural studies, literature, and theory and philosophy of Social Sciences and Humanities. 
Contributors include: Dustin J. Byrd, Ciarunji Chesaina, Hiba Ghanem, Mladjo Ivanovic, Masumi Hashimoto Odari, Arjuna Parakrama, JM. Persánch, Andrew Ridgeway, Rudolf J. Siebert, and Esmaeil Zeiny.

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Price: $30.00
Pages: 234
Publisher: Haymarket Books
Imprint: Haymarket Books
Series: Studies in Critical Social Sciences
Publication Date: 21 July 2020
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781642591941
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

POLITICAL SCIENCE / Colonialism & Post-Colonialism, Colonialism and imperialism, LITERARY CRITICISM / Semiotics & Theory, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General, Politics and government, Literary theory, Sociology

Esmaeil Zeiny, Ph.D. (2013), is a Research Fellow at the Institute of Malaysian and International Studies (IKMAS), National University of Malaysia (UKM). He has recently co-edited Seen and Unseen: Visual Cultures of Imperialism (Brill, 2018, with Sanaz Fotouhi).

Foreword: Whose Rest is Best? (Un)Learning Binaries from Subalternity 
Arjuna Parakrama 
Acknowledgements 
Notes on Contributors 
Introduction: The Rest and Decolonial Epistemologies 
Esmaeil Zeiny 
Part 1: Positioning New Paradigms
1 Must Non-Europeans Think Like Us? A Critique of Modern Thoughtlessness in Western and Resten Societies 
Dustin J. Byrd 
2 End or Continuation of World History: the European, Slavic and American World – A New Paradigm? 
Rudolf J. Siebert 
3 Echoes of the Past: Colonial Legacy and Eurocentric Humanitarianism 
Mladjo Ivanovic 
Part 2: Positioning Counter-discourses
4 Women Refashion Iran: Decolonizing the Rehistoricized Narratives 
Esmaeil Zeiny 
5 African Literature: Leadership, Plight of the Majority and Hope 
Masumi Hashimoto Odari and Ciarunji Chesaina 
6 Aesthetic Hospitality: Mustafa Saʾeed as Guest in Tayeb Salih’s Season of Migration to the North 
Hiba Ghanem 
7 The Rest in the White West: After the Empire is Buried, Shadows of Your Black Memory Are Born 
JM. Persánch 
8 The Topography of Nostalgia: Imaginative Geographies and the Rise of Nationalism 
Andrew Ridgeway 
Index