Rahul Krishna Gairola, Queering Home

The CUNY Graduate Center Postcolonial Studies Group Colloquium Series 2009-2010

The Postcolonial Studies Group & QUNY present:

Rahul Krishna Gairola
University of Washington

Queering Home:
Neoliberal Nationalism and Diasporic Genealogies in Hanif Kureishi’s Sammy and Rosie Get Laid.

This talk critically examines Sammy and Rosie Get Laid, an acclaimed film written by Hanif Kureishi, in order to track post-colonial perceptions of “home” to the ways in which “home” becomes a place of strife and struggle for queer people of color trying to make the UK “feel at home.” I demonstrate how queer South Asian diasporic agents resist the interpellative practices of the British nation-state during the years of Margaret Thatcher. She echoed Ronald Reagan’s neo-liberalism by issuing an invitation to diasporic South Asians to join the nation by hailing them as the country’s new “meritocrats” – a notion clearly dependant on the official tenets of neoliberal multiculturalism and predicated on their utility as profit-making cogs in the British economy. That is, she invited them to belong even as she dismantled a number of aspects of the Welfare State. I argue that Kureishi visually marks the very disparate “home” spaces whose privileges in Thatcherite England can be directly tracked to various histories of marginalization including legacies of colonialism, racism, classism, sexism, and heteronormativity.

March 19th AT 2 P.M.
CUNY Graduate Center, Room 5409
All are welcome.

The CUNY Graduate Center is located at 365 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10016.
The Postcolonial Studies Group is a chartered organization of the Doctoral Students’ Council. Please visit our website at www.opencuny.org/psg

Questions? Email Lily Saint at lsaint@gc.cuny.edu.

Ruling Like a Foreigner: Literature, Theory and the Question of Third World Authoritarianism

The CUNY Graduate Center

Postcolonial Studies Group Colloquium Series 2009-2010

The Postcolonial Studies Group presents:

Jini Kim Watson

New York University

Ruling Like a Foreigner: Literature, Theory and the Question of Third World Authoritarianism

Dec 4th at 2 p.m.

CUNY Graduate Center, Room 5409

All are welcome.

Jini Kim Watson (PhD, Duke University, Literature, 2006) is Assistant Professor of English and Comparative Literature at New York University where she teaches postcolonial theory and literature. She has published on postcolonial East and Southeast Asia in the journals Postcolonial Studies, Contemporary Literature and Positions: East Asia Cultures Critique (forthcoming). She has recently completed a book manuscript entitled The New Asian City: Space, Urban Form and Three-dimensional Fictions. Her most recent work concerns comparative theorizations of dictatorships in postcolonial literature and theory.

The CUNY Graduate Center is located at 365 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10016.

The Postcolonial Studies Group is a chartered organization of the Doctoral Students’ Council. Please visit our website at www.opencuny.org/psg

Questions? Email Fiona Lee at fiona.lee@gmail.com.

Flyer [pdf]

A Travel Paradise: Tourism Narratives of Robben Island

The CUNY Graduate Center

Postcolonial Studies Group Colloquium Series 2009-2010

The Postcolonial Studies Group presents:

Helen Kapstein

John Jay College, CUNY

A Travel Paradise: Tourism Narratives of Robben Island

Oct 16th at 2 p.m.

CUNY Graduate Center, Room 5409

All are welcome.

Helen Kapstein is a tenured professor in the English Department at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, The City University of New York. She earned her M.A. and Ph.D. in the Department of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University. Her academic areas of interest include postcolonial and modern British literatures, cultural and media studies, and southern African literature and culture. Her work has appeared in Safundi and The Journal of Literary Studies, among other places, and she is currently working on a book project about global tourism in postcolonial literature and society. 

The CUNY Graduate Center is located at 365 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10016.

The Postcolonial Studies Group is a chartered organization of the Doctoral Students’ Council. Please visit our website at www.opencuny.org/psg

Questions? Email Lily Saint at lsaint@gc.cuny.edu.

Flyer [pdf]