Interesting collaging the different talks together under the idea of " colonial space ". Thinking about your point of Fanon's experience and interpretation happening together, with no time line, in terms of space.
I'm enjoying the professor's critiques. In this one, I must say that at around the 7:20 mark the prof. should've included zionist israel & its treatment of Palestinians as the 3rd example of contemporary postcolonialism, after China & Russia to give a bit of balance with respect to NATO (i.e., U.S. & its minions) vs. non-NATO nations. Plus, israel's treatment of Palestinians is far more vicious, oppressive than that of the other two cited countries.
@@CriticReadingWriting Sir, your content is fantastic and it really helps one to appreciate and understand and explore the continued discourse around postcolonialism and the the literature that has emerged as a result of critical thought on the subject. I must however state that the volume of the recording makes for a difficult listening experience as it is just about audible at full volume on my laptop in a quiet room. Please consider this as a technical suggestion rather than a critique of your work. Thank you
Interesting collaging the different talks together under the idea of " colonial space ". Thinking about your point of Fanon's experience and interpretation happening together, with no time line, in terms of space.
I'm enjoying the professor's critiques. In this one, I must say that at around the 7:20 mark the prof. should've included zionist israel & its treatment of Palestinians as the 3rd example of contemporary postcolonialism, after China & Russia to give a bit of balance with respect to NATO (i.e., U.S. & its minions) vs. non-NATO nations. Plus, israel's treatment of Palestinians is far more vicious, oppressive than that of the other two cited countries.
Poor sound,sir.
The sound is fine. You might want to increase the volume on your device.
@@CriticReadingWriting Sir, your content is fantastic and it really helps one to appreciate and understand and explore the continued discourse around postcolonialism and the the literature that has emerged as a result of critical thought on the subject. I must however state that the volume of the recording makes for a difficult listening experience as it is just about audible at full volume on my laptop in a quiet room. Please consider this as a technical suggestion rather than a critique of your work. Thank you