BHUM 17A40 - Postcolonial Urban Spaces: Theory and Representation

This course explores how colonial histories continue to shape contemporary urban spaces, particularly in France and Britain. We will engage with key postcolonial thinkers and examine theoretical texts, literature, film, and visual culture that connect the legacy of empire to urban experiences of segregation, marginality and alterity in places like the council estates of London or the concrete high-rises of the French banlieues. In the first half of the course, we will study foundational postcolonial theorists including Edward Said, Frantz Fanon, Stuart Hall, and Paul Gilroy, amongst others, to develop a theoretical framework and critical vocabulary for understanding the intersections between postcolonial thought and the city. The second half of the course will turn to artistic representations of these spaces, focusing on literature and film that capture the experiences of youth, identity and community in marginalized neighbourhoods. Through novels like Faiza Guène's Kiffe kiffe demain (2006) and Guy Gunaratne's In Our Mad and Furious City (2018), as well as films such as La haine (1995) and the miniseries Small Axe (2020), we will explore how cityscapes become lived and symbolic sites of postcolonial tension and resistance. The final session will begin a reflection on how postcolonial frameworks apply to North American urban contexts. It is meant to spark thought about the ways colonial legacies shape cities across the Atlantic. Ultimately, students will gain methodological tools to analyse how colonial pasts continue to resonate in today's cities as well as a deeper understanding of contemporary urban issues.
Rebecca BLANCHARD
Séminaire
English
There are no prerequisites for this course
Autumn and Spring 2025-2026
Midterm Exam (30%) Group Presentation (30%) Reading Reflection (30%) Participation (10%)
Session 1: Course Introduction + Orientalism Session 2: From Empire to Metropole: Colonial Histories and Migration Session 3: Decolonizing Space: Fanon and the Divided City Session 4: Theorizing Race, Identity and Belonging Session 5: Space, Segregation and the Right to the City Session 6: Midterm Exam In-class essay exam (90 minutes) Session 7: Postcolonial Paris: Republicanism and the French Banlieue Session 8: Banlieue Girlhood: Faiza Guène's Kiffe kiffe demain Session 9: Belonging in Postcolonial London Session 10: Writing the Margins: Guy Gunaratne's In Our Mad and Furious City Session 11: Film as Postcolonial Urban Critique Session 12: Conclusion: Postcoloniality and the American City
In Our Mad and Furious City, Guy Gunaratne
Kiffe kiffe demain, Faiza Guène
Orientalism, Edward Said