The Dictionary of Human Geography

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foreign histories’ and ‘subordinate indigenous
histories’ (Perera, 1998, p. 6). It begs the
question whether the condition of the world
today has been so reconfigured as to be ‘incon-
trovertiblypost-colonial’ (Hall, 1996, p. 256),
or whether it is more likely that ‘colonialism
left the everyday life of many quite untouched;
or that the changes it did bring often passed
unrecognized as changes’ (During, 1992,
p. 346). Privileging ‘the moment of the
‘‘post-colonial’’ ... [may] simply revive or
re-stage exactly what the post-colonial so tri-
umphantly declares to be ‘‘over’’’ (Hall,
1996b, p. 248; cf. Gregory, 2004).
Others have cautioned against the navel-
gazing tendencies of certain forms of post-
colonial studies – which seem reluctant to go
much further beyond theorizing ‘the meaning
of the hyphen’ (Mishra and Hodge, 1991,
p. 399) – and have emphasized instead the
need for post-colonial studies to engage with
‘material practices, actual spaces and real pol-
itics’ (Sylvester, 1999, p. 712: see also Driver,
1996; Jackson and Jacobs, 1996; Barnett,
1997, p. 137; Lester, 1998; Driver and
Gilbert, 1999b). If the main limits of post-
colonial theories lie in their mistaken ‘attempt
to transcend inrhetoricwhat has not been
transcended in substance’ (Ryan, 1994,
p. 82), then an important starting place in
overcoming some of these limitations would
be to dissect post-colonialism as threaded
through real spaces, built forms and the
material substance of everyday biospheres.
At the same time, the ‘prospects of getting
past the post’ (Yeoh, 2001) must be tied to the
larger enterprise of constructing and elaborat-
ing alternative post-colonial geographical tra-
ditions that will steer a path through what
Ram (1998, p. 628) calls ‘on the one hand, a
sphere of the modern which is so hopelessly
contaminated by its colonial origins that it
seems exhausted as a source of critique and
action, and on the other, a non-elite discourse
which is completely unconnected with the
modern and is unable to represent anything
other than utterotherness’. The first steps
are the most difficult, as Chatterjee (1994,
p. 216) points out: ‘‘europeand theamericas,
the only true subjects of history, have thought
out on our behalf not only the script of colo-
nial enlightenment and exploitation, but also
our anti-colonial resistance and post-colonial
misery.’ Sidaway (2000, p. 593) also notes
that ‘any postcolonial geography must realize
within itself its own impossibility, given that
geography is inescapably marked (both philo-
sophically and institutionally) by its location

and development as a western-colonial sci-
ence’. For a post-colonial geography to aspire
to significant breaks with the prescribed script,
one step forward would be to view post-
colonialism as a highly mobile, contestatory
and still-developing arena, where opportun-
ities for insight may be gained at multiple sites.
While its redemptive features as a means of
resisting colonialisms of all forms and its
manipulative aspects as a vehicle for colonial-
ism to reproduce itself cannot be totally disen-
tangled, its critical edges may be sharpened
not only to ‘dismantle colonialism’s signifying
system’, but also to articulate the silences of
the native by ‘liberating the suppressed in dis-
course’, and to speak back to the centre
(Alatas, 1995, p. 131: see also Rattansi,
1997; Nagar and Ali, 2003). In this vein,
Robinson (2003a, citing Chakrabarty) calls
for a ‘provincialising’ of Western scholarship,
followed by a more sustained engagement with
cosmopolitan practices in the production of
post-colonial knowledge. by

Suggested reading
Blunt and McEwan (2002); Robinson (2003);
Sidaway (2000).

post-development A tradition of thinking
and political action that refuses to accept that
developmentis somehow natural or innocent.
Its proponents also dispute the suggestion that
‘developing countries’ can or should follow in
the footsteps of thewest/north. Some post-
developmentalists go further and argue that
the discourse of development has done
immense damage in the global South. Arturo
Escobar (1995) has famously maintained that
development produced onlyfamine, debt and
increased povertyfor the majority world.
Post-1950 development had failed, he said,
and other modes of being had to be discovered
and worked through. In this vein, post-
development refers to that set of ecological,
economic and cultural experiments that will
produce new and presumably better ways of
being human.
Post-development thought is really a spec-
trum of oppositional thinking that mixes old
and new insights in roughly equal measure. At
one end of the spectrum is a tradition of
anti-developmentthought that is frankly dis-
missive of development. Anti-development
activists reach back to Mahatma Gandhi and
Leo Tolstoy when they contend that develop-
ment is violent and dehumanizing. There is
more than a hint of this thinking is Escobar’s
book,Encountering development: development

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POST-DEVELOPMENT
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