When Frantz Fanon asserted that
"for a colonized people, the most essential value, because the most
concrete, is first and foremost the land: the land which will bring them bread
and, above all, dignity," he might have laid the groundwork for the
critical field of postcolonial-ecocriticism. According to Fanon, the term
"land" is the defining feature of former colonies, serving as both an
identity marker and a source of livelihood for the inhabitants, including both
the colonizers and the colonized, both before and after the end of physical
colonialism. This insight provides a basis for the collaboration of ideological
concerns of postcolonial critics to develop a more comprehensive theory on
colonized people and their natural environment.
While ecocriticism initially focused on the conservation of
nature, particularly "the wilderness," postcolonialism centers on the
"analytics of place, power, knowledge, and representation".
Therefore, postcolonialism and ecocriticism converge on the idea that both
fields are concerned with the representation of place, with postcolonialism
emphasizing the historical aspects of place and ecocriticism focusing on the
aesthetics of place.
Erin James suggests that when the environmental focus of
ecocriticism intersects with the cultural, linguistic, and representational
concerns of postcolonialism, there is an opportunity to "expand the
boundaries of each discourse in new and exciting ways". However, this
combination creates a philosophical instability within postcolonial-ecocriticism.
Rob Nixon identifies key differences between the two:
Postcolonialists emphasize hybridity and cross-culturation,
while ecocritics historically lean towards discourses of purity, emphasizing
virgin wilderness and preserving 'uncorrupted' places.
Postcolonialism often deals with displacement, while
environmental literary studies prioritize the literature of specific places.
Postcolonial studies tend to favor cosmopolitan and
transnational perspectives, criticizing nationalism. In contrast, environmental
literature and criticism often develop within a nationalistic American
framework.
Postcolonialism explores marginalized histories, often along
transnational axes of migrant memory, while environmental literature tends to
repress history for a pursuit of timeless moments with nature.
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