Robert J.C. Young
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Robert J. C. Young FBA (born 1950) is a British
postcolonial Postcolonialism is the critical academic study of the cultural, political and economic legacy of colonialism and imperialism, focusing on the impact of human control and exploitation of colonized people and their lands. More specifically, it is a ...
theorist, cultural critic, and historian.


Life

He was educated at
Repton School Repton School is a 13–18 co-educational, independent, day and boarding school in the English public school tradition, in Repton, Derbyshire, England. Sir John Port of Etwall, on his death in 1557, left funds to create a grammar school whi ...
and
Exeter College, Oxford (Let Exeter Flourish) , old_names = ''Stapeldon Hall'' , named_for = Walter de Stapledon, Bishop of Exeter , established = , sister_college = Emmanuel College, Cambridge , rector = Sir Richard Trainor ...
, where he read for a B.A. and D.Phil., taught at the
University of Southampton , mottoeng = The Heights Yield to Endeavour , type = Public research university , established = 1862 – Hartley Institution1902 – Hartley University College1913 – Southampton University Coll ...
, and then returned to
Oxford University Oxford () is a city in England. It is the county town and only city of Oxfordshire. In 2020, its population was estimated at 151,584. It is north-west of London, south-east of Birmingham and north-east of Bristol. The city is home to th ...
where he was Professor of English and Critical Theory and a fellow of
Wadham College Wadham College () is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom. It is located in the centre of Oxford, at the intersection of Broad Street and Parks Road. Wadham College was founded in 1610 by Dorothy W ...
. In 2005, he moved to
New York University New York University (NYU) is a private research university in New York City. Chartered in 1831 by the New York State Legislature, NYU was founded by a group of New Yorkers led by then- Secretary of the Treasury Albert Gallatin. In 1832, th ...
where he is Julius Silver Professor of English and Comparative Literature. From 2015 - 2018, he was Dean of Arts & Humanities at NYU Abu Dhabi. As a graduate student at Oxford, he was one of the founding editors of the ''
Oxford Literary Review ''Oxford Literary Review'' is an academic journal of literary theory. The journal was founded in the late 1970s by Ian McLeod, Ann Wordsworth and Robert J. C. Young, and publishes articles on the history and development of deconstructive thinkin ...
'', the first British journal devoted to literary and philosophical theory. Young is Editor of ''Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies'' which is published eight times a year. His work has been translated into over twenty languages. In 2013 he was elected a Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy, in 2017 he was elected to an honorary life fellowship at Wadham College, Oxford. Young is currently President of the AILC/ICLA Research Committee on Literary Theory.


Works

Young's work has been described as being 'at least partially instrumental in the radicalisation of postcolonialism'. His first book, ''White Mythologies: Writing History and the West'' (1990) argues that Marxist philosophies of history had claimed to be world histories but had really only ever been histories of the West, seen from a Eurocentric—even if anti-capitalist—perspective. Offering a detailed critique of different versions of European Marxist historicism from Lukács to Jameson, Young suggests that a major intervention of
postcolonial theory Postcolonialism is the critical academic study of the cultural, political and economic legacy of colonialism and imperialism, focusing on the impact of human control and exploitation of colonized people and their lands. More specifically, it is ...
has been to enable different forms of history and historicisation that operate outside the paradigm of Western universal history. While postcolonial theory uses certain concepts from
post-structuralism Post-structuralism is a term for philosophical and literary forms of theory that both build upon and reject ideas established by structuralism, the intellectual project that preceded it. Though post-structuralists all present different critiques ...
to achieve this, Young argues that post-structuralism itself involved an anti-colonial critique of Western philosophy, pointing to the role played by the experience of the Algerian War of Independence in the lives of many French philosophers of that generation, including Derrida, Cixous, Lyotard, Althusser, and Bourdieu. ''White Mythologies'' was the first book to characterise
postcolonial theory Postcolonialism is the critical academic study of the cultural, political and economic legacy of colonialism and imperialism, focusing on the impact of human control and exploitation of colonized people and their lands. More specifically, it is ...
as a field in itself, and to identify the work of Edward W. Said, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak,
Homi K. Bhabha Homi Kharshedji Bhabha (; born 1 November 1949) is an Indian-British scholar and critical theorist. He is the Anne F. Rothenberg Professor of the Humanities at Harvard University. He is one of the most important figures in contemporary post ...
and the
Subaltern Studies The Subaltern Studies Group (SSG) or Subaltern Studies Collective is a group of South Asian scholars interested in the postcolonial and post-imperial societies. The term ''Subaltern Studies'' is sometimes also applied more broadly to others who sh ...
historians as its intellectual core. In ''Colonial Desire'' (1995) Young examined the history of the concept of ' hybridity', showing its genealogy through nineteenth-century racial theory and twentieth-century linguistics, prior to its counter-appropriation and transformation into an innovative cultural-political concept by postcolonial theorists in the 1990s. Young demonstrates the extent to which racial theory was always developed in historical, scientific and cultural terms, and argues that this complex formation accounts for the ability of racialised thinking to survive into the modern era despite all the attempts made since 1945 to refute it. The most significant mistake that has been made, he suggests, involves the assumption that race was developed in the nineteenth-century purely as a 'science' which can be challenged on purely scientific grounds. Having deconstructed 'white Marxism' through the lens of postcolonial theory in ''White Mythologies'', in ''Postcolonialism: An Historical Introduction'' (2001), Young charted the genealogy of postcolonial theory in the very different trajectory of Marxism as the major ideological component of twentieth-century anti-colonial struggles. The book provides the first genealogy of the anticolonial thought and practice which form the roots of postcolonialism, tracing the relation of the history of the national liberation movements to the development of
postcolonial theory Postcolonialism is the critical academic study of the cultural, political and economic legacy of colonialism and imperialism, focusing on the impact of human control and exploitation of colonized people and their lands. More specifically, it is ...
. Stressing the significance of the work of the Third International, as well as Mao Zedong's reorientation of the landless peasant as the revolutionary subject, Young points to the importance of the Havana Tricontinental of 1966 as the first independent coming together of the three continents of the South—Africa, Asia and Latin America—in political solidarity, and argues that this was the moment in which what is now called 'postcolonial theory' was first formally constituted as a specific knowledge-base of non-Western political and cultural production. In ''Postcolonialism: A Very Short Introduction'' (2003) Young links this genealogy of postcolonialism to the contemporary activism of the New Social Movements in non-Western countries. Intended as an introduction to postcolonialism for the general reader, the book is written in a highly accessible style and unorthodox format, mixing history with fiction, cultural analysis with moments of poetic intensity that stage and evoke postcolonial experience rather than merely describe it. Instead of approaching postcolonialism through its often abstract and esoteric theories, the book works entirely out of particular examples. These examples emphasise issues of migration, gender, language, indigenous rights, 'development' and ecology as well as addressing the more usual postcolonial ideas of
ambivalence Ambivalence is a state of having simultaneous conflicting reactions, beliefs, or feelings towards some object. Stated another way, ambivalence is the experience of having an attitude towards someone or something that contains both positively and neg ...
, hybridity, orientalism and subalternity. In ''The Idea of English Ethnicity'' (2008) Young returned to the question of race to address an apparent contradiction—the idea of an English ethnicity. Why does ethnicity not seem to be a category applicable to English people? To answer this question, Young reconsiders the way that English identity was classified in historical and racial terms in the nineteenth century. He argues that what most affected this was the relation of England to Ireland after the Act of Union of 1800–1. Initial attempts at excluding the Irish were followed by a more inclusive idea of Englishness which removed the specificities of race and even place. Englishness, Young suggests, was never really about England at all, but was developed as a broader identity, intended to include not only the Irish (and thus deter Irish nationalism) but also the English diaspora around the world—North Americans, South Africans, Australians and New Zealanders, and even, for some writers, Indians and those from the Caribbean. By the end of the nineteenth century, this had become appropriated as an ideology of empire. The delocalisation of the country England from ideas of Englishness (Kipling's "What do they know of England who only England know?") could account for why recent commentators have found Englishness so hard to define—while at the same time providing an explanation of why some of the most English of Englishmen have been Americans. On the other hand, Young argues, its broad principle of inclusiveness also helps to explain why Britain has been able to transform itself into one of the more integrated, or hybridized, of modern multiethnic nations. In 2015, together with Jean Khalfa, Young published a 680 page collection of writings by
Frantz Fanon Frantz Omar Fanon (, ; ; 20 July 1925 – 6 December 1961), also known as Ibrahim Frantz Fanon, was a French West Indian psychiatrist, and political philosopher from the French colony of Martinique (today a French department). His works have b ...
, the first new work by Fanon to be published in over 50 years, ''Écrits sur l’aliénation et la liberté'' which includes two previously unpublished plays, together with psychiatric and political essays, letters, editorials from the weekly journals at the hospitals at Saint Alban (''Trait d'union'') and Blida (''Notre Journal''), as well as a complete list of Fanon's library and his annotations to his books.


Selected publications

Other books * ''Empire, Colony, Postcolony''. Oxford and Malden, Mass: Wiley-Blackwell, 2015. Paperback: . LCC

. * ''Torn Halves: Political Conflict in Literary and Cultural Theory''. Manchester: Manchester University Press. 1996. (Hardcover: . Paperback: .) LCC
95030849
. An online copy may be available fro
HathiTrust
Editions *Frantz Fanon. ''Écrits sur l’aliénation et la liberté, Œuvres II.'' Textes réunis, introduits et présentés par Jean Khalfa et Robert JC Young. Paris: La Découverte, 2016. . LCC

. *Frantz Fanon. ''Alienation and Freedom'' eds Jean Khalfa and Robert J.C. Young, trans. Steve Corcoran. London: Bloomsbury, 2018. Edited works * ''Untying the Text: A Post-Structuralist Reader''. edited, with an introduction. London; Boston: Routledge & Kegan Paul. 1981. (Hardcover: . Paperback: .) LCC
81212202
. * ''Post-Structuralism and the Question of History''. edited, with an introduction, with Derek Attridge and Geoff Bennington. Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press. 1987. . LCC
86012972
. Prefaces * 'Sartre: The African Philosopher’. Preface to ''Jean-Paul Sartre, Colonialism and Neo-colonialism''. Trans. Azzedine Haddour, Steve Brewer and Terry McWilliams. London; New York: Routledge, 2001. (Hardcover: . Paperback: .) LCC
00045940
. *'Poetica del mutamento culturale radicale'. Preface to ''Frantz Fanon, Scritti politici. L'anno V della rivoluzione algerina'', vol. 2. Trans. Miguel Mellino. Rome, Roma: DeriveApprodi, 2007. . . Electronic publications
‘Le pagine che bruciano il passato’
Caffé Europa 292, 09.01.06.
‘The Violent State’
Naked Punch, Supplement 02, 2009.
'What is the Postcolonial?'
Ariel 40:1 (2009) 13–25,


References


External links


robertjcyoung.com
Website of books, essays, translations of the writings of Robert JC Young

Copies of publications by Robert J.C. Young hosted on Academia.edu *
Robert Young, "What Do We Mean By Postcolonial Art?", Edinburgh Festival 2010
{{DEFAULTSORT:Young, Robert J. C. British historians Historians of colonialism 1950 births Living people Alumni of Exeter College, Oxford Fellows of Wadham College, Oxford Academics of the University of Southampton People educated at Repton School Corresponding Fellows of the British Academy