Book title
Cambridge Critical Concepts: Space and Literary Studies
Empire, Nation, and the Question of Space
Abstract
The chapter resituates the ideas of empire and nation in relation to the category of space. It delineates the centrality of the concept of space for understanding the imperial and contemporary world-system and the development of colonial capitalist modernity. Drawing on theorists that include but are not limited to Karl Marx, Frantz Fanon, Henri Lefebvre, Nikos Poulantzas, Raymond Williams, and Edward Said, the chapter seeks to understand how their works engage with space as a critical concept, and how their theorizations deploy the category of space to illuminate the production of new kinds – and conceptions – of space in colonial capitalist modernity: the metropole and the colony; notions of the core, periphery, and the semiperiphery; and the modern world-system as a concatenation of spaces – that is, a set of contiguous and nominally equal nation-states separated out from each other through the novel spatial form of the border. The chapter also examines theorizations of the nation to underline it as an ideology of space.
Recommended Citation
Banerjee S and Majumder A, ‘Empire, Nation, and the Question of Space’, Space and Literary Studies (Cambridge University Press 2025)
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Year
2025
Comments
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009424264.011