http://thinkingculture.blogspot.com/2004/11/spivak-death-of-discipline-dnyanada.html
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Monday, November 22, 2004
Spivak, Death of a
Discipline (Dnyanada)
Death
Of a discipline
These are three lectures delivered by Gayatri Spivak in the
∑ Disciplinary
∑ Methodological
∑ Linguistic-axiological
The three essays deal with the issues relating to the problematic and politics
of the disciplines making them inefficient to understand and compare the cross-
cultural realities. She argues that the disciplines such as Comparative
Literature founded on inter-European hospitality, as area studies had been
spawned by interregional vigilance. Area Studies departments in the US
Universities were federally funded by the title VI and title VIII grants which
were distributed in the wake of the cold war.
As the disciplines themselves get situated within the larger political
framework, the possibilities of the “knowledge production” get punctuated by
the concerns of that politics. Spivak argues not for
the politics of hostility but rather towards a politics of friendship that has
potentials to shape the knowledge production within the context of these
disciplines.
The three lectures delivered by Spivakk are titled
1. Crossing Borders
2. Collectivities
3. Planetarity
Spivak argues that the instruction of axiology is
disappearing in the Universities and at times it gets taught in an implicit
way. For example the marked erasure of any Marxist critique of capitalism from
the syllabi of any business school.
In the first lecture, Spivak sets the stage for the
argument demonstrating how the disciplines frame the discourse. She argues
that, “ In order to reclaim the role of teaching literature
as training the imagination- the great inbuilt instrument of othering-, we may, if we work as hard as old fashioned
Comp. Lit. is known to be capable of doing, come close
to the irreducible work of translation, not from language to language but from
body to ethical semiosis, that incessant shuttle that
is a ‘life’.”
Spivak pursues this argument as she claims that the
“Comparative literature and Area studies can work together in the fostering not
only national literatures of the global south but also of the writings of
countless indigenous languages in the world that were programmed to vanish when
the maps were made.”
By looking at the languages and the politics of naming and erasure of those
languages Spivak tries to contextualize the politics
of globalization. The other two essays deal with the comprehension of the
collectivities in the post-structuralist context. Is
it possible to understand communities or we have to develop a more
comprehensive notion of planetarity that can offer
critical insights into the formations of transnational linkages in the context
of globalization.
I found this text extremely relevant in order to frame the context of
postcolonial understanding of the Bollywood films. As
the production and consumption of Bollywood software
involves global and virtual locales.
Spivak’s essays inspire to frame the lens to look at
the possibility of politics of friendship between film studies and area
studies.
posted by paul @ 4:34
PM