Bringing together high profile scholars in the fields of Deleuze and postcolonial studies, this book highlights the overlooked connections between two major schools of contemporary criticism and establishes a new critical discourse for postcolonial literature and theory.Introduction: Navigating Differential Futures; (Un)making Colonial Pasts; L.Burns & B.M.Kaiser PART I: DETERITORIALIZING DELEUZE, RETHINKING POSTCOLONIALISM Forget Deleuze; B.B.Janz The Bachelor-Machine and The Postcolonial Writer; G.Lambert The World With(out) Others, or How to Unlearn the Desire for the Other; K.Thiele Edward Said Between Singular and Specific; D.Huddart Deleuze, Hallward, and the Transcendental Analytic of Relation; N.Nesbitt PART II: THE SINGULARITY OF POSTCOLONIAL LITERATURES The Singularities of Postcolonial Literature: Preindividual (hi)stories in Mohammed Dib's 'Northern Trilogy'; B.M.Kaiser Postcolonialism Beyond the Colonized and the Colonizer: Caribbean Writing as Postcolonial 'Health'; L.Burns Becoming-animal, Becoming-political in Rachid Boudjedra's L'Escargot Ent?t?; R.Bensmaia , translated by P.Krus Revolutionizing Pleasure in Writing: Subversive Desire and Micropolitical Affects in Nalo Hopkinson's The Salt Roads; M.Marinkova Undercurrents and the Desert(ed): Negarestani, Tournier and Deleuze Map the Polytics of a 'New Earth'; R.Dolphijn Afterword Postcolonial Deleuze; R.Braidotti Index
'This volume offers an impressive line-up of scholars, who tackle the complex intersection between Deleuze's philosophy and postcolonial literature head on and with a laudable thoroughness. The strength of these essays lies in the quality of the scholarship behind them; the authors all engage fully with the difficult philosophical concepts that both Deleuze and postcolonial theory presents. At the same time the pieces are logical, well written and clearly argued.' - Eva Aldea, Visiting Tutor, Goldsmiths College, University of London, UK
REDA BENSMAIA University Prolc0