A Date with Bill | @ SCILET
The 2020 Paul L Love Endowment
Lecture was delivered by Professor Bill Ashcroft at 11 am on 28 October 2020 on the virtual Zoom platform.
Professor Bill Ashcroft spoke
on the topic, ‘Postcolonialism Today’.
Dr. Bill Ashcroft, one
of the founding exponents of Postcolonial Theory and a renowned critic, is currently
Fellow, Australian Academy of the Humanities (FAHA), Professor Emeritus, School
of Arts and Media, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia.
Professor Bill
Ashcroft began by talking about the importance and relevance of postcolonial
studies continues to the present contexts!
‘One reason for
its relevance even today is because it is dynamic’, he observed.
Says Bill -
On developing Postcolonial studies with
reference to –
Postcolonial Utopianism
Borders and Bordering
Utopianism
The Utopian Studies Society
was established in the year 1988.
It was just sheer coincidence that The
Empire Writes Back was published in the very next year, in 1989.
He also cited from two books, titled,
Ernst Bloch’s The Principle of Hope
(1986)
And
Fredric Jameson’s Archaeologies of
the Future (2005)
Excerpts from his Lecture -
There’s a
difference between Utopia and Utopianism
A difference between
the ‘placeless place’ and the spirit of hope, between the representation of
utopia and the anticipatory function of utopianism.
Sargent,
‘social dreaming’
Levitas – “the desire for a better
way of living expressed in the description of a different kind of society that
makes possible that alternative way of life”.
The irony of postcolonial utopia
King Utopus invades the land, changes its
name, ‘civilises’ the indigenous inhabitants and cultivates the natural
‘wasteland’!
He also spoke
on Literature’s Anticipatory Function.
On the importance
of art and literature in imaging a different world.
In this regard he alluded to Ben Okri’s
famous line, where he says, ‘Writers are the dream mechanism of the human
race’.
Vorschein or
‘anticipatory illumination’, the revelation of the ‘possibilities for
rearranging social and political relations to produce Heimat.
Heimat – the home
we have all sensed but never experienced or known. It is Heimat as utopia that
determines the truth content of a work of art!
For Bloch,
Heimat always lies beyond the borders!
Borders have become very significant for
Postcolonial Studies!
What would
the world look like without borders?
How would
the walling in become porous?
Thinking about
that becomes Utopian!
The growth
of borders
End of WW II – 7 borders
When Berlin wall fell – 15 Border Walls
Today – 77 border Walls or fences
A border is not a thing, but a practice.
It’s an ideological practice.
It is both a
consequence and production of power relationships.
Without borders
we don’t have a nation, said Trump.
The idea of a border
is something that gives us the sense of nation.
But border doesn’t go
around a nation, but it goes through a nation, and helps in construction of
power relationships.
He then quoted the following
lines from Cavafy’s “Waiting for the Barbarians”.
Waiting for the Barbarians
BY C. P. CAVAFY
TRANSLATED BY EDMUND KEELEY
Why this sudden bewilderment,
this confusion?
(How serious people’s faces have become.)
Why are the streets and squares emptying
so rapidly,
everyone going home lost in thought?
Why isn’t anything
going on in the senate?
Why are the senators sitting there
without legislating?
Because the barbarians
are coming today.
What’s the point of senators making laws
now?
Once the barbarians are here, they’ll do
the legislating.
Because night has
fallen and the barbarians haven't come.
And some of our men just in from the
border say
there are no barbarians any longer.
Now what’s going to happen to us without
barbarians?
Those people were a kind of solution.
Borders and the Horizon of Literature
The Borders Within
The boundary of the state never
marks a real exterior… It is a line drawn internally, within the network of
institutional mechanisms through which a certain social and political order is
maintained! (Mitchell 1991: 90).
Bordering practices
include rules, laws, restrictions, surveillance and more subtle forms of
pressure such as nationalistic rhetoric.
Simonsen – Eight borders
or boundary markers as criteria for national membership –
1. National ancestry
2. Being of the national religion
3. birth on the country’s soil
4. having lived in the country for most
of one’s life
5. language skills
6. respect for the country’s laws and
institutions
7. having host national citizenship
8. feeling as part of the nation.
Borders and the Horizons of Literature
Rushdie, Step Across this Line
Good writing assumes a frontierless
nation. Writers who serve frontiers have become border guards… In our deepest
natures we are frontier crossing beings. We know this by the stories we tell
ourselves; for we are story-telling animals.
Edward Said – Exile is
both ‘the mind of winter’ and the invigorating condition of the public
intellectual’s engagement with regimes of identity control such as nation,
religion, culture and ethinicity.
The Creative spirit,
for which literature is a powerful metonym, is the ultimate border crosser. It
is inherently postnational because its tendency is not to belong, the
nationality of literatures being a function of reading rather than writing.
Heimat is not a nation
but the range of possibilities.
The concept
of Transnation!
Postcolonialism and the Nation
Postcolonial dissatisfaction with
the concept of Nation
Soyinka – Africa carved
up ‘like some demented tailor who paid no attention to the fabric, colour or
pattern of the quilt he was patching together’.
The borders that form
a nation are colonial borders, and a nation is a colonial construction.
Hobson says, ‘Empire bred
nationalism undermined the chance of true internationalism’.
Internationalism – does
not construct through bordering practices.
Partha Chatterjee – nationalism
undermines the progress of decolonization because the ‘national form’ is
hostile to their own cultures.
Postcolonial Utopianism
and the critique of the nation state –
Tagore, Gandhi
Transnation –
Is the nation that circulates
around the bordering practices of the state.
Transnation –
is the fluid migrating outside of the state that begins within the nation. A
way of talking about subjects who circulate around the bordering practices of
the state.
Deleuze and Guattari –
‘smooth vs
striated space’
Texture –
Striated space
is the space of the State.
Smooth space is the space of the
Transnation.
Scott, ‘infra politics’ –
1. The undramatic,
everyday and mundane acts of quite evasion
2. Slowdowns, false
compliance, feigned ignorance and sabotage carried out by factory workers –
that when performed by many change or alter a landscape of power.
The creative spirit
is the ultimate border crosser.
That’s where we bring
together the notion of utopia.
The creative spirit
is of unbelonging, it looks beyond the border.
Postcolonial approaches
to literature generate that kind of realization, that, literature could imagine
a possible world – potentially disruptive –
Particularly in
Australia, they are wary of any kind of creative work!
The end of Bill
Ashcroft’s Talk!
This was followed
by a rewarding time of questions and answers.
Special congratulations
to SCILET for having hosted such an amazing speaker of international repute.
In fact, I still remember
going all the way to Pune, a couple of years ago, to listen to Bill talk on
Postcolonial Utopias. [You may want to watch the YouTube video, that I had done
then, on his talk, HERE]
Hence it was a double
blessing to listen to Bill Ashcroft speak, from the luxury of our own homes!
Thanks a million
to Dr. Premila Paul, to Dr. R.P. Nair and to all the lovely minds who made our
day with Bill!
Bill Ashcroft!