International Journal of
English and Literature

  • Abbreviation: Int. J. English Lit.
  • Language: English
  • ISSN: 2141-2626
  • DOI: 10.5897/IJEL
  • Start Year: 2010
  • Published Articles: 278

Review

Postcolonial feminism: Looking into within-beyond-to difference

  Raj Kumar Mishra
MITS Deemed University (Sikar) India; C/o Pankaj Tiwari, Plot No. 13, Sukhmaya Vihar Colony, Dandupur, Christnagar, Chandmari, Varanasi-221003, India.
Email: [email protected], [email protected]

  •  Accepted: 03 May 2013
  •  Published: 30 June 2013

Abstract

 

Postcolonial feminism is a relatively novel wing of postcolonial feminine scholarship. Postcolonial feminism or ‘third world feminism’ emerged in response to Western mainstream feminism. Western feminism has never been heedful to the differences pertaining to class, race, feelings, and settings of women of once colonized territories. Postcolonial feminism rejects Western feminism on the ground of its utter ‘eurocentricism’. Hence it is fallacious to hope postcolonial females to be valued, appreciated and justified by the Western hands. Of course, the long Western tendency to homogenize and universalize women and their experiences led to the emergence of ‘postcolonial feminism’. Postcolonial feminism is a hopeful discourse it seeks peaceful solutions for all world marginalized women. Postcolonial feminists imagine a world in which differences are celebrated and enjoyed. Postcolonial feminists work for social, cultural, economic, and religious freedoms for women.

 

Key words: Colonialism, postcolonialism, postcolonial feminism, and postcolonial ecriture.