This work analyzes the contemporary conditions of culture and criticizes common definitions of identity. Bhabha makes use of continental philosophy, social sciences and literature (crediting Morrison, Salman Rushdie, and even Anish Kapoor), draws on Said and Spivak, and reads Fanon extensively—blending anti-colonial critique with post-structuralism. His main object is the long-term effects of colonialism on social identities and culture, even after the departure of the colonizers or the abolition of slavery. From an inquiry concerning the effects of the awareness of social positions and the political usages of identity, he finds that culture is characterized by hybridation and going beyond established limits. Against the idea that cultures are fixed traditions belonging to identified communities, Bhabha tries to explain how social meanings are an on-going, dynamic and relational process, underlining contradictions, ambivalence, and two of the main concepts of this book: hybridity (the mixed nature of culture) and mimicry (the adoption of ideas and values from other cultures). In his view, "[d]ifferences in culture and power are constituted through the social conditions of enunciation" (p. 242), meaning that culture needs to be seen as fragmented, unstable and sometimes antagonistic. Bhabha elaborates a definition of the boundary not as a limit, but as the site for theoretical production and artistic creation, exemplified by the proliferation of "post" in contemporary theory (poststructuralism, postmodernism, etc), which he understands as a movement of going beyond, pointing towards a constant invention of oneself.
Bhabha, Homi K. The Location of Culture
1994, London: Routledge.
Added by: Zoé Grange-Marczak
Abstract:
Comment: Despite its reputation for being challenging, The Location of Culture tends to be didactic and uses plenty of historical, philosophical and artistic examples. Some of its chapters have been published separately, thus offering a variety of short texts on a wide array of subjects, suitable for close readings synthesizing key issues of 21st century theory. Edited over a dozen times, it remains one of the main recent work for postcolonial theory and literary criticism, and shows the legacy of several main authors.