Hi, my name's Tom and welcome back to another episode of What the Theory?, my
ongoing series in which I aim to provide some accessible introductions to key
theories in the humanities. Today, as per a number of requests in comments to some
of my other What the Theory? videos, we're gonna be taking a look at postcolonialism.
Now, if you've yet to check out my video on colonialism and colonial
ideology, then I would suggest watching that before you watch this one. It's not
essential, however, I will link it up in the top corner. And, before we get going,
just a quick note to say that I'm not entirely unaware of the irony of me,
white English bloke, supposing to explain postcolonialism. However, it felt like
the only way to avoid doing so would have been to leave it out of the What
the Theory? series altogether which felt equally wrong. And so, what I've aimed
to do throughout this video is to draw upon scholarly voices and other
voices of those who might have a far more visceral understanding and
experience of postcolonialism than mine which can only ever really be academic.
As always, I'll be very happy to discuss the inconsistencies and problems
with this approach down in the comments, as well as any suggestions for any
future videos you'd like to see. With that out of the way, however, let's crack
on.
So, in the previous episode of What the Theory, we were largely interested in the
process through which a number of European nations came to have military
and political dominance of much of the globe and the ideologies which supported
or attempted to legitimize their doing so. Over the second half of the 20th
century, however, many then colonized nations gained their independence from
their colonial rulers, sometimes through a peaceful handover of power yet,
often, through a protracted popular uprising. In the present day, then, that
particular form of colonialism, in which one nation rules over another, is, though
not entirely absent, somewhat less common. Nonetheless, the absence of a formal
colonial system has not led to a completely equitable geopolitics or
global culture. We only need to look at the disparity in wealth between, say,
Europe and Africa or North America and Central and South America to see that
that is the case. In short, colonialism has a clear and persistent legacy. And
postcolonialism is an umbrella term which we use to describe a set of theory
and practices which seek to explore the legacy of colonialism in the present day.
And much of this does attend to the political and economic legacies of
colonialism. However, as this is What the Theory?, today we're going to largely be
focusing on the cultural legacy of colonialism and some of the ideas and
theories that have come to be used to explore the cultural legacy of
colonialism in the present day. Now, claiming a single theorist or a single
book as being the originator of an entire field is usually a gross
simplification of the truth. However, Edward Said's 1978 book
Orientalism can certainly lay claim to popularizing some of the key ideas which
now sit as the foundation of post-colonial theory. Within it, Said
argued that "ideas cultures and histories cannot seriously be understood or
studied without their force, or more precisely their configurations of power,
also being studied". For those of you who have watched my video
on Cultural Hegemony (which again I'll link above), this idea will be familiar.
It's the suggestion that, if a certain group within a society has more
political or economic power, they will likely also have an inequitable amount of
power in framing or deciding what the culture of that society, in which both
they and the more disempowered groups within that society, live. Said thus
argues that, as a consequence of many years of colonial rule, "the West" — a term
which is largely used to refer to nations which weren't colonized — has had
a significant amount more power in dictating global culture than "the
East" — a term which tends to be used to describe nations which were colonized.
And, in particular, Said suggests that what happened was that "the West"
essentially took away "the East"'s ability to represent or define itself and that,
instead, "the West" came to define "the East" in a manner that was useful for its own
terms. In Said's own words, "the imaginative examination of things
oriental was based more or less exclusively upon a sovereign Western
consciousness out of whose unchallenged centrality an oriental world emerged". The
central thrust of Said's thesis here is that, in a global culture dominated by
"the West", "the East" has usually been represented (often by "the West") as being
illogical, mysterious, strange, driven by base human passions. In contrast to this,
"the West" has often been represented as logical, cultured and, in short, the norm.
In her 1988 essay Can the Subaltern Speak?, another key text in the
development of postcolonial theory, Gayatri Spivak argues that the result of
this process was "to constitute the colonial subject as Other". Now, there are
two ideas at play here in the very foundations of postcolonial theory. The
first is the idea that this notion of "the West"
and "the East" or the "non-West" is a complete fabrication.
In Stuart Hall's words, it is "as much an idea as a fact of geography". But it also
points to the specific manner in which this false binary has been used. In short,
to portray "the West" and, vaguely speaking, European-descendant cultures — although
that's a problematic notion in and of itself — as being the norm and usual,
whereas cultures from other continents are largely defined as being strange and
other. So, this notion of the othering of non-Western culture can already be
something that we can use as a point of analysis for cultural texts. Gautam Basu
Thakur's 2016 book Postcolonial Theory and Avatar, for example, very much
utilizes this notion of "othering" in order to provide a postcolonial
critique of James Cameron's Avatar. Thakur argues that, though broadly
speaking the film is anti-colonialism, through its placement of the human being
as the protagonist of the film, it "reproduces a narrative of European
privilege and subject-production". In short, Thakur argues that, by placing the (albeit
eventually-relenting) colonizer as the protagonist of the film, it reinforces
the centrality of the West in conversation surrounding colonialism,
demoting the film's allegorical representation of the non-West to the
role of the strange and the other. However, for the purposes of today's
video, I think it is useful for us to have some other suggestions of what we might
be looking out for when we're seeking to analyze a cultural text through the
prism of postcolonial theory. So, in his book Beginning Theory,
Peter Barry very usefully lays out four characteristics which he sees as being
things which recur throughout postcolonial analyses. Number One: "an
awareness of representations of the non-European as exotic or immoral Other".
Number Two: an interest in the role of language in supporting or subverting
that power dynamic. Number Three: "an emphasis on identity as doubled, hybrid or
unstable" and Number Four: "a stress on 'cross-cultural' interactions". The first of
these very clearly suggests that, following Said and Spivak's ideas, when
undertaking a critique through postcolonial theory, we should always be
looking for whether the cultural text we are analyzing is supporting or
contesting this notion that the West is central and normal and the non West
other. The second seeks to foreground the role of language in supporting or
contesting that same power dynamic. See, under colonialism, many colonized nations
were forced to take the language of their colonizer as an official language,
using it for education say and also for the codification of law. So this second
characteristic of postcolonial analysis asks us to consider how language might
be supporting or contesting that colonial legacy. The third is really
complex and fascinating and stems from the ideas of Homi Bhabha who's really
interested in how colonialism can be perceived as a mixing-up of cultures,
that of the colonizer and that of the indigenous people that lived there
previously and were colonized. And how this mixed identity that many
people who lived in colonized nations had, what the effects of that might be
upon both individual identity and communal identity. And the fourth, in my
experience at least, largely manifests as what we call a "cultural materialist"
inquiry. Cultural materialism is something I'm planning on making a video
on soon. And what it essentially asks us to do, is to consider how the creative
process itself might be considered perhaps an echo or a complete subversion
of those colonial power dynamics. For instance, when a non-western piece of
culture is adapted into a Hollywood movie, who has agency in that creative
process and where is the money flowing to? Now, my initial instinct when looking
for a cultural text to analyze so that we had an example in this video of
how these ideas can be used, was to take a look at a cultural
text which, through the lens of postcolonial theory, we might view as
somewhat problematic (in a similar manner to Thakur did with Avatar). However, many
cultural texts can, themselves, be read as critiques of contemporary culture
through the lens of postcolonial theory. And taking a look at one of these texts
allows us to have a slightly more positive analysis of a piece of culture.
And so, I wanted to draw upon a recent cultural text which seems to have many
of the concerns of postcolonialism very much
at its forefront, and that is Marvel's 2018 box-office smash hit Black Panther.
So, for the remainder of this video, what we're gonna do is take some of these
ideas surrounding postcolonial theory that we've been looking at, and use them
as the starting point for a discussion around Black Panther. So, without giving a
complete rundown of the plot, because that's not entirely necessary here, Black
Panther takes as its protagonist T'Challa, who, as well as being the king of the
african nation of Wakanda, is also a superhero. But it's Wakanda itself, and
its use as the basis of a postcolonial critique of the
contemporary world, that I'm mostly going to focus on discussing today. See,
Wakanda is a resource-rich nation which is far technologically superior to any
other in the Marvel Cinematic Universe's version of Earth. And, as Dwayne
Wong (Omowale) argues in an article for The Huffington Post, this allows us to
imagine what might have been if European nations had not stripped Africa of its
resources and what might have been achieved if African nations had been
allowed to develop on their own terms. In addition to this, positioning Wakanda as
being far more technologically-advanced and wealthy even, say, than the United States,
flips the real world on its head and allows us to explore a world in which a
non-Western nation held more power within the global culture. In relation to
Barry's first characteristic of postcolonial analysis, then, what this
does is to decenter Western hegemony by placing a fictional nation based very
much in African tribal traditions at the center of geopolitics. Furthermore, in
Wakanda's initial deceit to the rest of the world, in which it presents itself
as an impoverished pre-industrial nation, Black Panther directly plays upon
Western perceptions of Africa as a continent as being intrinsically unable
to develop and maintain its own wealth. And, moving on to Barry's second
characteristic of postcolonial analysis, we can also see that language plays a
key role here. On the suggestion of John Kani who plays T'Challa's father T'Chaka,
filmmakers utilized the real South African language of isiXhosa as the
language of Wakanda. This is important because, as John Eligon reports in the
New York Times, "isiXhosa is very much associated with the South African fight
against white colonizers. [...] It was Xhosa people who engaged in a century of
fighting against European colonial invaders in the Frontier Wars. More
recently, some of the country's most prominent anti-apartheid crusaders were
Xhosa, including Nelson Mandela". Language is thus here used in order to carry
real-world histories of resistance to colonialism into Black Panther's text. In
relationship to Barry's third characteristic of postcolonial analysis,
we can see that, within Black Panther, the idea of identity as being hybrid or
unstable is central to the conversations and arguments which happen surrounding
Wakandan foreign policy. See, T'Challa initially very much supports the
continuation of Wakanda hiding away from the world and looking after its own
citizens whereas Killmonger, one of the villains of the film, argues that
Wakanda has a moral obligation to equip oppressed people of
African descent around the world with vibranium to help them overthrow their
oppressors. Killmonger and, eventually, T'Challa, therefore exhibit elements of a
pan-African worldview. Pan-Africanism being the notion that there should exist
a global solidarity between all people of African descent whether still living
on the continent itself or part of the diaspora.
And, implicit in this worldview is the notion that identity can be
hybrid or dualistic; that one can be living in America, say, but also retain an
element of that African identity. Finally, considering Barry's fourth
characteristic of postcolonial theory — that idea of exploring cross-cultural
collaboration — we have to see that Black Panther is intrinsically such a
collaboration. Marvel Studios (and Disney which owns it) are American companies and
in Black Panther they are drawing heavily upon cultural fragments from
nations within Africa. Now, there is a long history of such collaborations
being highly problematic: see, for example, the casting of Scarlett Johansson in the
2017 adaptation of the Japanese manga Ghost in the Shell. However, to draw
admittedly on the opinion of only one person, Nteranya Arnold Sanginga
commented on the release of the film that "I among many others have also
appreciated the manner in which the movie has included a range of Africans.
Blurring the idea of what it means to be African and participate in such an
installation". The fact, here, that the film was used as a platform for the talent of
African creatives and those within the diaspora, goes some way to ensuring that
the film does not solely take cultural fragments from Africa in order to line
the pockets of westerners. I'm sure there are many opposing opinions to many of
the observations that I've drawn upon about Black Panther, almost definitely by
people far more qualified to make them. And, please, if you have your own thoughts
on the film then it'd be really interesting to have a discussion about
it down in the comments. However, what I hope you'll be able to see is how we can
use the ideas of postcolonial theory to analyze and start conversations about
cultural texts whether, as in the case of Black Panther, they seem to very much
forward some of these ideas within the cultural text itself or whether, as in
the case of Avatar, they seem to reinforce that colonial legacy.
Thank you very much for watching this video, I hope you've enjoyed watching it as much as
I've enjoyed making it. I'm currently lining up my next What the Theory? video
which I think will either be Aesthetics, Poetics or Cultural
Materialism. If you have any strong thoughts on which I should do next, then
do let me know down below. And, if you'd like to see future videos, then please do
consider subscribing. That said though, thank you very much
once again for watching and have a great week!
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