Tag: Nostalgias

Postcolonial Nostalgias Writing, Representation and Memory


Free Download Dennis Walder, "Postcolonial Nostalgias: Writing, Representation and Memory"
English | 2010 | pages: 215 | ISBN: 0415445337 | PDF | 2,2 mb
This book offers an original and informed critique of a widespread, yet often misunderstood, condition ― nostalgia, a pervasive human emotion connecting people across national, historical, and personal boundaries. Walder analyses the writings of some of those entangled in the aftermath of empire, tracing the hidden connections underlying their yearnings for a common identity and a homeland, and their struggles to recover their histories. Through a series of comparative reflections upon the representation in literary and related cultural forms of memory, he shows how admitting the past into the present through nostalgia enables former colonial or diasporic subjects to gain a deeper understanding of the networks of power within which they are caught in the modern world, and beyond which it may yet be possible to move. Considering authors as varied as V.S Naipaul, J.G. Ballard, Doris Lessing, W.G. Sebald, and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, as well as versions of "Bushman" song, Walder pursues the often wayward, ambiguous paths of nostalgia as it has been represented beyond, but also within, Europe, so as to identify some of those processes of communal and individual experience that constitute the present and, by implication, the future.

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Shamans, Nostalgias, and the IMF South Korean Popular Religion in Motion


Free Download Laurel Kendall, "Shamans, Nostalgias, and the IMF: South Korean Popular Religion in Motion"
English | 2009 | pages: 282 | ISBN: 0824833988 | PDF | 24,7 mb
Thirty years ago, anthropologist Laurel Kendall did intensive fieldwork among South Korea’s (mostly female) shamans and their clients as a reflection of village women’s lives. In the intervening decades, South Korea experienced an unprecedented economic, social, political, and material transformation and Korean villages all but disappeared. And the shamans? Kendall attests that they not only persist but are very much a part of South Korean modernity.

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