Affiliation:
1. University of Otago, New Zealand
Abstract
Homi Bhabha's idea of hybridity is one of postcolonialism's most keenly debated — and most widely misunderstood — concepts. My article provides some elucidation in the increasingly reductive debates over hybridity in postcolonial studies, suggesting that what is commonly overlooked in these debates is hybridity's complex relationship to temporality. I suggest that this relationship is not given the credit it deserves often enough, resulting in skewed discussions of hybridity as simply (and mistakenly) another form of syncretism. In focusing on the `time of hybridity' in the context of a bicultural politics in Aotearoa/New Zealand, I draw renewed attention to hybridity's investment in temporality as that which both enables a postcolonial politics and shifts these politics into the realm of (Levinasian) ethics, creating an as yet largely unexplored phenomenon which Leela Gandhi has referred to, in a fortuitous phrase, as an `ethics of hybridity'.
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Philosophy
Reference54 articles.
1. The Empire Writes Back
2. Bell, Avril (2004) `"Half-castes" and "White Natives": The Politics of Maori- Pakeha Hybrid Identities', Cultural Studies in Aotearoa/New Zealand: Identity, Space and Place, ed. Claudia Bell and Steve Matthewman. Melbourne: Oxford University Press, pp. 121-38.
Cited by
33 articles.
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