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Representing Bushmen
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Table of Contents

Introduction: Unity in Diversity
Colonial Intellectual
On the Origin
Human/Animal
Writing Bushmen
Language and Blood
Colonial Family Crypt
Bushman Literature
Conclusion: Presentiment

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"Shows how the fine-grained study of a colonial archive can generate an expansive examination of "the after-image of the colonial subject," as well as a powerful critique of postcolonial neoliberalism. From the work of nineteenth-century philologist W. H. I. Bleek, Shane Moran culls a tradition-stretching from the early colonization of southern Africa to post-apartheid South Africa and running through philology, ethnography, political economy, philosophy, and history-of representing the Bushmen as exemplary indigenes. Along the way, Moran examines the entanglement of cultural essentialism and linguistic theory; the articulation of racism and capitalism; the productive encounters between deconstruction and historicism; the tensions between reconciliation and social, political, and economic restructuring; the role of the colonial and post-colonial intellectual; and the ongoing life of that which we think we have mourned to death." -David Kazanjian, associate professor of English and Comparative Literature, University of Pennsylvania

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