MOVING BEYOND EDWARD SAID: HOMI BHABHA
Abstract
The essay takes up the issue of postcolonial representation in terms of
a critique of European modernism that has been symptomatic of much postcolonial
theoretical debates in the recent years. It tries to enumerate the epistemic changes within
the paradigm of postcolonial theoretical writing that began tentatively with the publication
of Edward Said’s Orientalism in 1978 and has taken a curious postmodern turn in recent
years with the writings of Gayatri Spivak and Homi Bhabha. The essay primarily focuses
on Bhabha’s concepts of ambivalence and mimicry and his politics of theoretical
anarchism that take the representation debate to a newer height vis-à-vis modes of
religious nationalism and Freudian psychoanalysis. It is interesting to see how Bhabha
locates these within a postmodern paradigm.