Hogan, Patrick. Colonialism and Cultural Identity: Crises of Tradition in Anglophone Literatures of India, Africa, and the Caribbean. New York: SUNY P, 2000. 353 pp.


CoverExplores diverse cultural identities, both theoretically and through concrete, specific interpretations of selected major texts from former British colonies.

This book examines the diverse responses of colonized people to metropolitan ideas and to indigenous traditions. Going beyond the standard isolation of mimeticism and hybridity--and criticizing Homi Bhabha's influential treatment of the former--Hogan offers a lucid, usable theoretical structure for analysis of the postcolonial phenomena, with ramifications extending beyond postcolonial literature. Developing this structure in relation to major texts by Derek Walcott, Jean Rhys, Chinua Achebe, Earl Lovelace, Buchi Emecheta, Rabindranath Tagore, and Attia Hosain, Hogan also provides crucial cultural background for understanding these and other works from the same traditions.

"Patrick Hogan analyzes literary works to tell the story of the annihilation of selves and the death of cultures that accompanied colonialism. But it is also a story of the emancipatory visions that have emerged from the crucibles of self-disavowal and massive cultural dislocations. This book is a homage to human creativity under oppressive and humiliating conditions and to the indomitable resilience of the defeated and the forgotten. In Hogan's analysis, the homelessness produced by colonialism becomes the bedrock of a new tension in the postcolonial world, between categories that sustain conventionality and categories tinged with a new transcultural vision." -- Ashis Nandy, coeditor of Creating a Nationality: The Ramjanmabhumi Movement and Fear of the Self

"With great learning and a polished, accessible literary style, Hogan has undertaken--with the use of carefully defined terminology and intellectually rigorous interpretation--the formidable task of examining a large body of literature produced in postcolonial societies to show it as an integral part of the universal human heritage. His penetrating reading of Rabindranath Tagore's great novel, Gora, and Derek Walcott's play, Dream on Monkey Mountain, are indicative of his pioneering work that marks a breakthrough in scholarship in the field." -- Ainslie T. Embree, author of Utopias in Conflict: Religion and Nationalism in Modern India.