ABSTRACT

This book brings forth a new contribution to the study of imperialism and colonial discourse by theorizing the emergence and function of individual identity as product and producer of imperial power. While recent decades of theoretical reflections on imperialism have yielded important understandings of how the West has repeatedly reconsolidated its power, this book seeks to grasp the complex role of subjectivity in reformulating the terms of imperial domination from early modern European expansion to late capitalism. This entails approaching Empire as a constantly shifting system of differences and meanings as well as an ontological project, a mode of historical writing, and economy of desire that repeatedly envelops the subject into the realm of western power. The analysis of an array of literary texts and cultural artifacts is undertaken by means of a theoretically eclectic approach – drawing on psychoanalysis, post-structuralism, postcolonial theory, and Marxism – with the aim of forwarding current knowledge of Empire while also contributing to different branches of critical theory. In exploring the formation of imperial subjectivity in different historical moments, Silva raises new questions related to the signification of otherness in European expansion and colonial settlement, slavery and eugenics in post-independence Americas, and late capitalist circulation of bodies and commodities. The volume also covers a broad range of geo-cultural spaces in order to locate western power in time and space. This book’s diversity in terms of approach, historical scope, and cultural contexts makes it a useful tool for research and teaching among students and scholars of disciplines including Postcolonial Studies, Colonial History, Literature, and Globalization.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

part |71 pages

Conveying Colonial Space

chapter |39 pages

Imperial Interpellations

Signifying the West's Scene of Writing

chapter |31 pages

In the Name-of-the-Father

Imperial Mastery, Paternity, and Settlement

part |79 pages

Nation as Imperial Project in the Americas

chapter |37 pages

Signifying Bodies

Slavery and the Writing of Western Nationhood in the Americas

chapter |41 pages

Modern Fantasies of Universality

Segregation, Science, and Urban Renewal in Fin de Siècle Americas

part |59 pages

Empire and Late Capitalism

chapter |36 pages

Meaning in Movement

Empire, Difference, and Late Capitalism

chapter |6 pages

Conclusion