次等研究与后殖民史学

D. Chakrabarty
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引用次数: 106

摘要

《次等研究:关于印度历史和社会的著作》始于1982年,作为一系列关于印度现代史写作的辩论的介入Ranajit Guha(生于1923年)是当时在苏塞克斯大学任教的印度历史学家,他是该书背后的灵感来源。古哈和来自印度、英国和澳大利亚的8位年轻学者组成了《次等研究》的编辑小组,直到1988年,古哈从小组中退休作为一个学术专业领域,该系列现在已经远远超越了印度或南亚,在全球范围内开展业务。现在,庶民研究的知识范围也超过了历史学科。不同学科背景的后殖民理论家对这个系列产生了兴趣。例如,在社会科学知识的建构中,《次等研究》的贡献者是如何参与对历史和民族主义、东方主义和欧洲中心主义的当代批判的。与此同时,在许多历史和社会科学期刊上也有关于次等研究的讨论选择系列出版的英语,西班牙语,孟加拉语,andHindi和的过程中被拿出在泰米尔和Japanese.4拉丁美洲次等研究协会成立于北美在1992.5不会不公平的说,表达“次等的研究中,“一旦印度历史上一系列出版物的名称,现在作为研究领域统称常被视为postcolonialism的近亲。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Subaltern Studies and Postcolonial Historiography
Subaltern Studies: Writings on Indian History and Society began in 1982 as a series of interventions in some debates specific to the writing of modern Indian history.1 Ranajit Guha (b. 1923), a historian of India then teaching at the University of Sussex, was the inspiration behind it. Guha and eight younger scholars based in India, the United Kingdom, and Australia constituted the editorial collective of Subaltern Studies until 1988, when Guha retired from the team.2 The series now has a global presence that goes well beyond India or South Asia as an area of academic specialization. The intellectual reach of Subaltern Studies now also exceeds that of the discipline of history. Postcolonial theorists of diverse disciplinary backgrounds have taken interest in the series. Much discussed, for instance, are theways inwhich contributors toSubaltern Studies have participated in contemporary critiques of history and nationalism, and of orientalism and Eurocentrism in the construction of social science knowledge. At the same time, there have also been discussions of Subaltern Studies in many history and social science journals.3 Selections from the series have been published in English, Spanish, Bengali, andHindi and are in the process of being brought out in Tamil and Japanese.4 A Latin American Subaltern Studies Association was established in North America in 1992.5 It would not be unfair to say that the expression “subaltern studies,” once the name of a series of publications in Indian history, now stands as a general designation for a field of studies often seen as a close relative of postcolonialism.
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