Postcolonial Volk

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A01=Benjamin Zachariah
Author_Benjamin Zachariah
Benjamin Zachariah
Category=DS
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Category=QDTS
contemporary political theory
decolonial theory
decolonialism
decolonisation
decolonization
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eq_biography-true-stories
eq_history
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eq_non-fiction
intellectual history
nationalism
political philosophy
political theory
political thought
post-colonialism
postcolonial theory
postcolonial volk
postcolonialism
the postcolonial volk
volk
volkisch
Zachariah

Product details

  • ISBN 9781509562633
  • Weight: 340g
  • Dimensions: 146 x 222mm
  • Publication Date: 29 May 2026
  • Publisher: Polity Press
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Postcolonial theory and its bedfellow, decolonial theory, are the most flourishing products of academia in recent times. Transcending their origins in universities and literary criticism, and clustering around what is coming to be known as 'theory from the Global South', their guiding assumptions have leaked into the public domain and become shibboleths with which to acknowledge historically victimised communities. With this success has come a disturbing trend: political activity operates based on clumsy victimhood analogies, and much of its rhetoric is deliberately anti-rational, reproducing and perpetuating the manufactured categories of racist and sectarian imaginations.

Benjamin Zachariah examines this phenomenon and its worrying affinities with völkisch thinking. A product of nineteenth-century romantic nationalism, völkisch is an adjective that indicates a community of blood, soil and race. These aspects are less explicit in its newer guises, which instead invoke communities of collective memory. Nonetheless, Zachariah argues, the older form of collective belonging remains embedded in the apparently new attitudes, as a compulsory community of inherited victimhood and organic belonging.

Striking and thought-provoking, this book is a major intervention that will be of interest to anyone concerned by the more insidious side of postcolonialism.

Benjamin Zachariah is a senior research fellow at the Einstein Forum in Potsdam.

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