TRANSNATIONAL HISTORY VERSUS THE FORT, CAPITAL, AND EMPIRE

被引:0
|
作者
Zimmerman, Andrew [1 ]
机构
[1] George Washington Univ, Dept Hist, Hist & Int Affairs, Washington, DC 20052 USA
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中图分类号
K [历史、地理];
学科分类号
06 ;
摘要
In Andrew Zimmerman's view, the dialectic of "I" and "we" in Choi Chatterjee's "Manifesto" allows to speak of transnational history not just as an academic subspecialty but also as a particular vision of the future. This vision is simultaneously realizable and utopian, a real autobiography and a visionary project. The "I" in this text represents a decolonial position and hence perceives globality not as abstract cosmopolitanism but as myriad struggles, never complete, against multiple forms of oppression - colonial, postcolonial, and beyond. This "I-we" dialectic also informs the connection between teaching and research. Zimmerman interprets Chatterjee's research program as a decolonial reinterpretation of Voltaire's Candide - "cultivating one's garden" as the only meaningful response to a world of cruelty and misery around. Whereas Candide gardens to escape the world, Chatterjee and her students garden for the opposite purpose: to embrace the world, to seize the land. To write transnational history as Chatterjee suggests is to write history in, by, for, from, and about the "surround," - a history free from the ahistorical logic of the capital and domination.
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页码:49 / 54
页数:6
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