التابع عند غاياتري سبيفاك / نحو تصوّر جديد لما بعد الكولونيالية
The Subaltern According to Gayatri Spivak / Towards A New Post-Colonial Vision
Keywords:
غياتري سبيفاك. التابع. مابعد الكولونيالية ’ الالتابع الداخلي التابع الخارجيAbstract
Post-colonial theory that reveals and addresses colonial discourse from the colonizer's point of view is a re-reading of events and history from a very different angle decided by the subordinate or colonizer The relationship between the East and the West is analyzed in cultural accountability by a few researchers who have managed to reach Western thought and teach at its universities and present a different vision than what the colonizer has provided to correct the human path and establish national identity. One such Indian critic was Gayatri Spivak, who sought to dismantle colonial discourse. Her book, Can the Subaltern Speak؟” was the result of a major effort in which she defended Eastern women, defended the immigrant, internal and external affiliates, and was also interested in literature, culture and confronting Western masculinity. Indian critic Gayatri Spivak is one of the poles of post-colonial theory and an actor in the dismantling of colonial central discourse, especially patriarchal masculine discourse (internal subordinate), which has dominated for years so long that women live under the coercion of the male voice multiplier on the one hand and the colonial power on the other (external subordinate).