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Letter to the Free

Letter to the Free was released by Common in 2016, and it was less for entertainment than it was for sending out a political message. It was made for a documentary called the Thirteenth which documents black American culture and the legacy of slavery, and highlights the mass imprisonment of black Americans.

Common is an American Hip-Hop artist and rapper, known for intelligent and positive lyrics that were performed in a spoken-word style.

“Slavery’s still alive, check Amendment 13
Not whips and chains, all subliminal” – References the law that you can become a slave if you commit a crime, and how he believes this to be morally wrong and constituting to slavery’s resistance to dying.

“Barren souls, heroic songs unsung” – talks about how so many people, particularly of the black community, could have achieved a lot more if not for how they are treated – “heroic songs unsung”

“Tied with the rope that my grandmother died” – depicts how the slavery of old is still in effect today with similar principles.

Jodie’s powerpoint – https://hautlieucreative.co.uk/media23al/wp-content/uploads/sites/58/2022/01/Music-as-Political-Protest.pdf

Cultural hegemony: power, rule, or domination maintained by ideological and cultural means. Letter to the Free’s lyrics could be seen as cultural resistance in response to this.

Post – Colonialism

Postcolonialism is specifically looking at identity and representation through the lens of Empire and Colonialism.

The Shadow of Slavery

Postcolonial critical thought emerged as a distinct category in the 1990’s, with an aim to undermine the universalist claims that ‘great literature has a timeless and universal significance [which] thereby demotes or disregards cultural, social, regional, and nations differences in experience and outlook’

The Link between culture, imperial power & colonialism

Edward Said was a respected academic. He asked if ‘imperialism was principally economic‘ and looked to answer that question by highlighting ‘the privileged role of culture in the modern imperial experience’ (1997:3) He came up with orientalism.

Jacques Lacan

THE ‘OTHER’

Letter to the free (csp)

Music Video – Letter to the Free is a product which possesses cultural and social significance. It will invite comparison with other music videos allowing for an analysis of the contexts in which they are produced and consumed.

Released in 2016. The genre is hip-hop/rap

Letter to the free’ is in black and white as the marches were a non-violent protest to demonstrate the desire of black Americans to exercise their constitutional right to vote.

Common

Common is an American hip-hop artist, actor, and activist who became a mainstream success in the early 21st century.

He is known for intelligent and positive lyrics that were performed in a spoken-word style.

A Grammy winner, Common has also turned to acting, as seen with roles in projects. For the latter film, he and vocalist/musician John Legend have won a Golden Globe and an Oscar for the song “Glory.” 

Common made his album debut with Can I Borrow a Dollar? An artist known for often thoughtful, verbose lyricism and exploring varied sounds

Lyrics from letter to the free:

‘Freedom (Freedom)
Freedom come (Freedom come)
Hold on (Hold on)
Won’t be long (Won’t be long)’

:Shows that black people will come together to fight for equal rights and work hard to get it as soon as they can.

‘Instead of ‘n****’ they use the word ‘criminal’ ‘

:He’s saying that a lot of white Americans believe that people of colour are instantly criminals due top their skin colour.

‘The same hate they say will make America great again’

:White people think that to ‘make America great again’ white people should be superior to black people

‘Investing in injustice, fear and long suffering’

:American’s are paying to make ‘America great again’ at the cost of Black people suffering.

Jodie’s presentation

Postcolonialism

postcolonial criticism challenges the assumption of a universal claim towards what constitutes ‘good reading’ and ‘good literature’; questioning the notion of a recognised and overarching canon of important cultural texts – book, poems, plays, films etc – much of which is institutionalised into academic syllabi.

ORIENTALISM:

The Link between culture, imperial power & colonialism

the power to narrate, or to block other narratives from forming or emerging, is very important to culture and imperialism

Edward Said Culture and Imperialism, 1993: xiii

As a cultural critic, Said is known for the book Orientalism (1978), a critique of the cultural representations that are the bases of Orientalism.

The conclusion of Edward Said’s theory was that Western writings depicted Orient as an irrational, weak, feminized ‘Other’.

Jacques Lacan:

Common – LETTER TO THE FREE (CSP)

  • The  name ‘Common’ stands for ‘Common sense’
  • He was born in Chicago in 1972
  • Launched his own record label
  • first rapper to win an academy award
  • starting an acting career
  • net worth of £45 million

13th Amendment:

Section 1

Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.

Section 2

Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.

  • Passed by Congress on January 31, 1865, and ratified on December 6, 1865, the 13th Amendment abolished slavery in the United States.
  • The 13th Amendment was passed at the end of the Civil War before the Southern states had been restored to the Union, and should have easily passed in Congress.
  • On February 1, 1865, President Abraham Lincoln approved the Joint Resolution of Congress submitting the proposed amendment to the state legislatures. 
  • With the adoption of the 13th Amendment, the United States found a final constitutional solution to the issue of slavery. The 13th Amendment, along with the  14th and 15th, is one of the trio of Civil War amendments that greatly expanded the civil rights of Americans.

Key Concepts:
● Cultural resistance
● Cultural hegemony
● Subcultural theory

Key idea: the political, personal and cultural are always intertwined. The Idea of Resistance and Political Protest. Culture is what influences people’s hearts, minds and opinions. This is the site of popular change.

Antonio Gramsci: Italian philosopher writing in the 1930s

Cultural hegemony: power, rule, or domination maintained by ideological and cultural means.
● Ideology: worldview – beliefs, assumptions and values.

What is a subculture?
● Working-class youth culture
● Unified by shared tastes in style, music and ideology
● A solution to collectively experienced problems
● A form of resistance to cultural hegemony –  (re: Jodie’s presentation)

Common Lyrics:

  • “Slavery’s still alive, check Amendment 13” – talking about how slavery hasn’t been abolished just because rules have changed. They are constantly living in fear of doing the wrong thing or even being falsely accused.
  • Prison is a business, America’s the company” – talking about how the justice system is prejudice to POC.
  • We staring in the face of hate again The same hate they say will make America great again” – how America is great for cultural hegemony like white people . Referencing to Trump who uses this line in his campaign – terminology used in the 60s.
  • For America to rise it’s a matter of Black Lives– talking about how America benefits by exploiting POC.

13TH:

“America is home to 5% worlds population but 25% of the worlds prisoners” – the 13th

“300,000 prisoners in 1972 but now its 2.3 million”

“POC were arrested for minor crimes such as loitering or vagrancy.

“if you are white you are living the life based on what you’re ancestors chose. If you’re Black then you are living your life based on what your ancestors didn’t get to choose. “

“myths based on needing black bodies working”

“kkk was romanticised…another wave of terrorism…. shifted to something more legal; segregation”

“for the first time justice became at least a possibility”

Post Colonialism:

Overall, this is a topic that concerns IDENTITY and REPRESENTATION. In other words, where does our identity come from? How is our identity formed? How do we understand our own identity and how is our identity represented in the local, national and global media? But here it is specifically looking at identity and representation through the lens of Empire and Colonialism. Critically looking at culture. A key figure is Edward Said who wrote a couple of books about the link between culture, imperial power and colonialism.

ORIENTALISM:

The Link between culture, imperial power & colonialism

the power to narrate, or to block other narratives from forming or emerging, is very important to culture and imperialism

Similarly, ‘the East becomes the repository or projection of those aspects of themselves which Westerners do not choose to acknowledge (cruelty, sensuality, decadence, laziness and so on). At the same time, and paradoxically, the East is seen as a fascinating realm of the exotic, the mystical and the seductive.’ (Barry, 2017:195)

The one thing the orient couldn’t do was represent itself.

Jacques Lacan “The Other”

French Philosopher who says that we will never truly understand who we are or who others are. That we are in a state of constant comparison and subtly searching for identity. He says when a baby first sees itself in the mirror is the first time it becomes self-conscious as it understands that that is themselves in the mirror whilst animals wouldn’t. We only get a sense of who we might be or could be. We can never truly see who we are and will never know.

Letter to the Free – CSP

Key Concepts:
● Cultural resistance
● Cultural hegemony
● Subcultural theory

Key idea: The political, personal and cultural are always intertwined.

– The idea of resistance and political protest.

– Culture is what influences people’s hearts, minds and opinions. This is the site of popular change. The media can change how people see the world.

Antonio Gramsci: Italian philosopher writing in the 1930s.


Key Terms:
Hegemonic: Dominant, ruling-class, power-holders.
Hegemonic culture: The dominant culture.
Cultural hegemony: Power, rule, or domination maintained by ideological and cultural means.
Ideology: Worldview – beliefs, assumptions and values.

Jodie’s Presentation

Letter to the Free – Common

  • Lonnie Rashid Lynn, known by his stage name Common  (formerly Common Sense), is an American rapper and actor.
  • Common’s first major-label album Like Water for Chocolate (2000), received commercial success. In 2003, he won the Grammy Award for Best R&B Song for the Erykah Badu single “Love of My Life”.
  • Commons genre of music he records is Hip Hop, Neo Soul and Progressive Rap.
  • He achieved mainstream success through his work with the Soulquarians.
  • Common signed a major label record deal with MCA Records and relocated from Chicago to New York City in 1999. He began recording almost exclusively with a loose collective of musicians and artists (dubbed the “Soulquarians” by central figure Questlove).
  • Commons net worth is $45 million.

Letter to the Free Lyrics:

‘Black bodies being lost in the American dream’ – This explains that the dream for America is to be equal and racist free however black people are being taken out of the community and sent to be prison making America a white supremacy.

‘Slavery’s still alive, check Amendment 13’ – This expresses that slavery is still alive and is not used as a punishment but used because ‘they’ are black. Amendment 13 is “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.” meaning, slavery should only be used if someone has committed a criminal act. As well, people with power, e.g white racist police officers are arresting black people for no reason, due to them being a different race.

‘Prison is a business, America’s the company’

‘Instead of ‘n***a’ they use the word ‘criminal’

13th Netflix movie (2016)

  • 13th explores the history of racial inequality in the United States, focusing on the fact that the nation’s prisons are disproportionately filled with African-Americans.
  • The movie was directed by Ava DuVernay and was distributed by Netflix.
  • 13th was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature at the 89th Academy Awards, and won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Special at the 69th Primetime Emmy Awards.
  • The 13th documentary made $566 USD in box office.

Postcolonialism

Postcolonialism specifically looks at identity and representation through the lens of Empire and Colonialism.

Postcolonial criticism challenges the assumption of a universal claim towards what constitutes ‘good reading’ and ‘good literature’; questioning the notion of a recognised and overarching canon of important cultural texts.

The Shadow of Slavery:

Key figure: Edward Said who wrote a book about culture, imperial power and colonialism. His book is called Orientalism.

Quote (Edward) – ‘the power to narrate, or to block other narratives from forming or emerging, is very important to culture and imperialism‘.

Jacques Lacan was a intellectual French philosopher and psychoanalyst. He expresses that we can never discover ourselves as we cannot see ourselves from the outside, from a 3rd person perspective. Lacan proposed that in infancy this first recognition occurs when we see ourselves in a mirror. (You see yourself differently the way someone else sees you, in both looks and perspective.)

CSP – LETTER TO THE FREE

Common’s ‘Letter to the Free’

Lonnie Rashid Lynn, known by his stage name Common, is an American rapper and actor. He wrote ‘Letter to the Free’ in 2016.

  • His debut album was ‘Can I Borrow a Dollar?’ (1992).
  • Common won his first Grammy award in 2003 for ‘Best RnB Song’ for the single ‘Love of my Life’.
  • He co-wrote the song ‘Glory’ for the 2014 film ‘Selma’. He starred in the movie and won the Academy award for best original song.

Lyrics

Lyrics from ‘Letter to the Free’

“We ain’t seen as human beings with feelings”

  • The idea that black people living in America are often considered ‘lesser’ to those in political power and even civilians who support the right wing, hegemonic views.

“Black bodies being lost in the American dream”

Slavery’s still alive, check Amendment 13

The 13th Amendment  

Politically, the 13th Amendment states that …

“Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.”

  • The 2016 Netflix original documentary film ’13th’, directed by Ava DuVernay explores how slavery and racism is still present in the prisons of America even though it was seemingly abolished in 1865.

The Idea of Resistance and Political Protest

Key idea = The political, personal and cultural are always intertwined.

Culture is what influences people’s hearts, minds and opinions. This is the site of popular change.

Antonio Gramsci talked about Hegemony and Hegemonic culture, the way in which the dominant ideologies are in power.

Sub cultural theories – Subcultures offered young working class people a solution to the problems they were collectively experiencing in society.

Postcolonialism

Looking at identity and representation through the lens of Empire and Colonialism under the shadow of Slavery. It is a way of critically looking at culture.

Edward Said

He said that ‘the privileged role of culture in the modern imperial experience’. The way in which literature, music, art etc. frames the Western countries as the dominant culture and Eastern countries inferior. He has the idea that culture was created by white Europeans to give themselves a privileged position. He wrote a book called ‘Orientalism’ in 1978.

Orientalism = The stereotyping of the east. The assertion of western power over the east.  a general patronizing Western attitude towards Middle Eastern, Asian, and North African society.

Jacques Lacan “the other”

  • Lacan was a French Philosopher. He came up with the ideology that we never really know who we truly are, our identity is impossible to fully see ourselves.
  • His ideas stem from the way in which children first see themselves in a mirror and make a connection that it is themselves in reflection.
  • We are exploring ‘The Other’ as a way of exploring ourselves.
  • Linking to postcolonialism, this would be to suggest that the West uses the ‘Other’ (East), to identify and construct itself.

Letter to the Free

Common

An American rapper and actor. He has won many awards such as grammys for best R&B song, best rap album at the grammys, and many more. He launched ‘Think Common Entertainment, a record label in 2011. He has acted / voice acted in films/tv shows: Date night, suicide squad, small foot, now you see me, never have I ever and many more.

13th amendment

Abolished Slavery and involuntary servitude, except as punishment for a crime. There is a loophole in the 13th amendment- which allowed slavery to continue and provided more discrimination that still happens in today’s society.

Documentary:

Released in 2016. Film director and maker, Ava DuVernay, speaks about the history of racial inequality in the USA. Showing us that America’s prisons are filled with many more African-Americans than white Caucasians. It points out how much harm can be caused by slavery.

https://hautlieucreative.co.uk/media23al/wp-content/uploads/sites/58/2022/01/Music-as-Political-Protest.pdf

Cultural Hegemony

Key Concepts:
● Cultural resistance
● Cultural hegemony
● Subcultural theory

The Idea of Resistance and Political Protest

Key idea: the political, personal and cultural are always intertwined

Culture is what influences people’s hearts, minds and opinions. This is the site of popular change.

Antonio Gramsci

Hegemonic: dominant, ruling-class, power-holders
Hegemonic culture: the dominant culture
Cultural hegemony: power, rule, or domination maintained by ideological and cultural means.
Ideology: worldview – beliefs, assumptions and values

Functions by framing the ideologies of the dominant social group as the only legitimate
ideology.

(slide 3) The dominant social groups are shown through its economic, political, moral and social institutions.

Subculture

Working-class youth culture
Unified by shared tastes in style, music and ideology
A solution to collectively experienced problems
A form of resistance to cultural hegemony

Song lyrics

“We ain’t seen as human beings with feelings” I chose this lyric because it points out how people of colour are constantly being dehumanised.

“They stop, search and arrest our souls” I chose this lyric because people of colour don’t get the freedom deserve.

Post Colonialism

Looking at identity and representation through the lens of Empire and Colonialism.

Shadow of Slavery

Edward Said

Orientalism- the link between culture, imperial power and colonialism.

The arguments around postcolonial critical thought ‘constituted a fundamentally important political act’ (MacLeod, 200: 16)

The power to narrate, or to block other narratives from forming or emerging, is very important to culture and imperialism– Edward Said Culture and Imperialism, 1993: xiii

In this view, the outlying regions of the world have no life, history or culture to speak of, no independence or integrity worth representing without the West.‘ (Said, 1993: xxi).

Jacque Lacan “The other”

Search for identity by looking at the mirror or other things. You are only self conscious and aware when you see yourself in the mirror.

CSP: LETTER TO THE FREE

A LETTER TO THE FREE:

Common:

  • Stage name Common (formerly Common Sense)
  • American actor and rapper
  • Mainstream attention was from work with the Soulquarians
  • Won a grammy for best R&B Single, with the song “Love of My Life”
  • When acting he played in films like; John Wick Chapter 2, Street kings and American Gangster along with many others.
  • Birthday: March 13, 1972 (age 49)

A letter to the free quotes:

“Slavery’s still alive, check Amendment 13” – references proof for the song, makes people realise that they haven’t actually seen that slavery is gone, they’ve only heard and thought they knew. However in Amendment 13 its said that you can still be a slave if you’re a criminal.

“Prison is a business, America’s the company” – shows that America is profiting off of arresting people, specifically black people.

“Instead of ‘n***a’ they use the word ‘criminal” – this is an example of how slavery hasn’t disappeared, its just changed to be something else that people turn a blind eye to because its behind a prison wall. As well as this, the racial slur used displays that its those same, white, racist people that still have the power and instead of openly acting in slavery, they “arrest” black people for little or no reason at all, then getting them into slavery in prison.

13th Amendment:

  • The film explores the “intersection of race, justice, and mass incarceration in the United States”
  • the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, adopted in 1865, which abolished slavery throughout the United States and ended involuntary servitude except as a punishment for conviction of a crime.
  • She examines the prison-industrial complex and the emerging detention-industrial complex, discussing how much money is being made by corporations from such incarcerations.
  • Made $566 USD in box office

Youth Culture: Jodie’s presentation 

Culture is what influences people’s hearts, minds and opinions. This is the site of popular change.

○ Attempts to change to laws or legislation
○ Organised political movements
○ Public protests
○ Petitions, marches

Antonio Gramsci: 1891 – 1937

● Antonio Gramsci: Italian philosopher writing in the 1930s
Key Terms:
● Hegemonic: dominant, ruling-class, power-holders
● Hegemonic culture: the dominant culture
● Cultural hegemony: power, rule, or domination maintained by ideological and cultural means.
● Ideology: worldview – beliefs, assumptions and values

POSTCOLONIALISM:

The Shadow of Slavery:

Most locations wealth comes from the 400 years of slave trading. Places like the UK thrived off of slave trading between America and Africa. African kings traded other tribes prisoners for guns, plants and guns, then America traded plants, guns and substances for slaves.

Edward Said:

“the power to narrate, or to block other narratives from forming or emerging, is very important to culture and imperialism” – Edward Said Culture and Imperialism, 1993: xiii

Edward Said – “In this view, the outlying regions of the world have no life, history or culture to speak of, no independence or integrity worth representing without the West.

ORIENTALISM:

Europe’s view at the oriented of the world, implying the the west side of the word is better than the east, promoting stereotypes. For example stereotypes like Muslims are terrorists and black people are criminals, orientalism is what those races define the wests views on them.

Jacques Lacan:

We cannot actually see ourselves as whole, we use a reflection to understand who we are / who we are not

We can never discover who we are, because we cannot look at ourselves from the outside. We can only apprehend a reflection of ourselves. Finding ourselves is useless, we will never find out who/what we are, however we can find out who we are not.

CSP 7: Letter to the Free, Common

Lonnie Rashid Lynn, Jr. (Common)

  • born March 13, 1972, Chicago, Illinois, US
  • American hip-hop artist, actor, and activist who became a mainstream success in the early 21st century, known for intelligent and positive lyrics that were performed in a spoken-word style.
  • He was the first rapper to win a Grammy Award, an Academy Award and an Emmy Award
  • Net Worth: $45 Million
  •  launched ‘Think Common Entertainment, a record label in 2011

13th (2016)

  • American documentary film by Ava DuVernay
  • explores the “intersection of race, justice, and mass incarcentration in the United States;”

Key Concepts:

‘Slavery’s still alive, check Amendment 13
Not whips and chains, all subliminal
Instead of ‘nigga’ they use the word ‘criminal’

Highlights the fact that racial injustice is still very prominent within society, even though it isn’t entirely obvious – it has been masked by

‘For America to rise it’s a matter of Black Lives’

Post Colonialism Under the Shadow of Slavery

 The historical period or state of affairs representing the aftermath of Western colonialism and  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. 

Edward Said – Orentalism

  • the stereotyping of the East – exaggerates religious and cultural differences causing their humanity to be overlooked and the culture misunderstood
  • justifies the assertion of Western power over the East
  • when the West views the East in this way – it creates policies which marginalises them
  • In this view, the outlying regions of the world have no life, history or culture to speak of, no independence or integrity worth representing without the West.‘ – Said, 1993

Jacques Lacan – ‘The Other’

  •  the recognition of the ‘Other’ – the mirror stage of child development, whereby, as we cannot actually see ourselves as whole, we use a reflection to understand who we are / who we are not
  • To link this to postcolonialism would be to suggest that the West uses the East / the Orient / the ‘Other’, to identify and construct itself. How it sees itself as the ‘West’ as opposed to . . . in other words, it acts as The Other, a mirror by which a reflection of the self can be measured out and examined

Letter to the free

Music Video – Letter to the Free is a product which possesses cultural and social significance. It will invite comparison with other music videos allowing for an analysis of the contexts in which they are produced and consumed.

This is a targeted CSP and needs to be studied with reference to two elements of the Theoretical Framework (Media Language and Media Representation) and all relevant contexts

Common is an Oscar and Grammy award winning hip/hop rap artist who wrote Letter to the Free as a soundtrack to The 13th – a documentary by Ava DuVernay named after the American 13th amendment (the abolition of slavery). His output is highly politicised, existing in the context of a variety of social and cultural movements aimed at raising awareness of racism and its effects in US society (e.g.: Black Lives Matter). The product can also be considered in an economic context through the consideration of if and how music videos make money (through, for example, advertising on YouTube).

What needs to be studied? Key Questions and Issues

Media Language

Detailed study of Letter to the Free should help students to develop an understanding of how music video can serve a range of functions while communicating multiple meanings.
Analysis should include:
• Mise-en-scene analysis
• Cinematography
• Semiotics: how images signify cultural meanings
• Aesthetics

Narrative

• How does Letter to the Free appeal to its target audience?
• How is the narrative being constructed by the song lyrics reinforced?
• How does the narrative position the audience?
• How can the narrative invite a range of responses?
• What pleasures does the narrative offer the audience?
• How is the narrative incorporating views and ideologies?
• What is the role of Common in the narrative?

Genre

• Identification of the conventions of the Performative music video.
• How music videos serve the needs of media producers
• How music videos meet the expectations of audiences
• Genre theory including Neale


Media Representations

Letter to the Free explicitly focuses on the history and contemporary experience of African Americans and allows for an exploration of the effect of social, cultural and political context on representations of ethnicity.
• Representation of ethnicity, with focus on how Common is a black man exploring black culture-specific issues.
• Use of specific historical and contemporary experience to construct a political narrative and argument
• How representations invoke discourses and ideologies and position audiences
• Representation of gender within the video and in the context of wider representations of women in the music industry
• Representation of place
• Common as celebrity persona

Theories

  • The idea of culture as a site of political struggle (re: Jodie’s presentation for Ghost Town see below)
  • The the theory of hegemony – Gramsci
  • Theories of representation including Hall
  • Drawing on theories of Postcolonialism (Gilroy)
  • Theory of the Public Sphere – Habermas

Key Concepts:
● Cultural resistance
● Cultural hegemony
● Subcultural theory

The Idea of Resistance and Political Protest:
● When we first think about political protest, what comes to mind?
○ Attempts to change to laws or legislation
○ Organised political movements
○ Public protests
○ Petitions, marches
● However, we can look at political protest in terms of:
○ Cultural resistance
○ Everyday people
● Why look at cultural resistance?
○ Overt political protest is uncommon. When it occurs, it often results in a backlash.
○ Even if overt political protest does results in changes in legislation, it won’t necessarily change public
opinion.
○ Culture is what influences people’s hearts, minds and opinions. This is the site of popular change.
Key idea: the political, personal and cultural are always intertwined

Common LYRICS

postcolonialism

An overview:

This post is for students (and teachers) who would like some resources – videos, quotes, theorists, key texts, key words etc to help them think about the topic of POSTCOLONIALISM, which may appear in a range of creative, media, culture, communications, English, History and other courses.

Overall, this is a topic that concerns IDENTITY and REPRESENTATION. In other words, where does our identity come from? How is our identity formed? How do we understand our own identity and how is our identity represented in the local, national and global media? You can look at another post that looks at identity, representation and the self. But here it is specifically looking at identity and representation through the lens of Empire and Colonialism.

The Shadow of Slavery

Reaction and Reform?