Bibliografia sui Subaltern studies

Clelia Bartoli


Introduzione
I numeri di "Subaltern Studies"
Principali volumi miscellanei e antologici
Monografie
Articoli e recensioni


Introduzione

I Subaltern studies nascono a Delhi nei primi anni '80, come collettivo di studio intorno alla subalternità. Il loro organo ufficiale è la rivista "Subaltern Studies. Writings on South-Asian History and Society" [di cui riportiamo interamente l'elenco dei saggi contenuti].

Fin dal principio si propongono come gruppo interdisciplinare, anche se la maggior parte dei membri iniziali abbia una formazione storica e il loro progetto sia primariamente quello di scrivere una storia dal basso che decostruisca la narrazione coloniale, reinterpreti le fonti tradizionali e ne interpelli di nuove, nel tentativo problematizzato di dar voce ai soggetti subalterni.

Antonio Gramsci è l'ispiratore del termine chiave e del fuoco d'attenzione della scuola; il concetto di 'subalternità', però, riversato in India, si trasforma e si carica di accezioni estranee alle intenzioni dell'autore italiano. Esso ha comunque la funzione -polemica rispetto all'impiego di certe categorie marxiste classiche- di connotare gli strati bassi o politicamente emarginati della popolazione, prescindendo dal riferimento ad uno sviluppo socio-economico estraneo alla storia dell'India, come nel caso del termine 'proletariato'.

Attualmente i Subaltern studies costituiscono un influente corpo di ricerche in espansione, che ingloba, coinvolge e sfida molteplici discipline e molti nuclei vitali dell'attuale discorso accademico: tra cui i cultural studies, gli studi sul genere, l'orientalismo, i post-colinal studies, ecc. Questo gruppo di ricerca ha, poi, saputo ispirare studi sulla subalternità in molti altri paesi ex-colonizzati, in America latina e in Africa, stabilendo degli interessanti rapporti Sud-Sud.

I numeri di "Subaltern Studies", corredati dagli indici

  • Ranajit Guha (ed.), "Subaltern Studies. Writings on South Asian History and Society", No. 1, Oxford University Press, Delhi, 1982.

    • Ranajit Guha, On Some Apects of the Historiography of Colonial India
    • Partha Chatterjee, Agrarian Relations and communalism in Bengal, 1926-1935
    • Shahid Amin, Small Peasant commodity Production and Rural Indebtedness: the Culture of Sugarcane in Eastern U.P., c. 1880-1920
    • David Arnold, Rebellious Hillmen: the Gudem-Rampa Risings, 1939-1924
    • Gyan Pandey, Peasant Revolt and Indian Nationalism: The Peasant movement in Awadh, 1919-1922
    • David Hardiman, The Indian 'Faction': A Political Theory Examined
  • Ranajit Guha (ed.), "Subaltern Studies. Writings on South Asian History and Society", No. 2, Oxford University Press, Delhi, 1983.

    • Ranajit Guha, The Prose of Counter-Insurgency
    • Gautam Bhadra, Two Frontier Uprisings in Mughal India
    • Gyan Pandey, Rallying round the Cow: Sectarian Strife in the Bhojpuri Region, c. 1888-1917
    • Dual Revolt, Quit India in Bihar and the Eastern United Provinces: The Stephen Henningham Arvind N. Das, Agrarian Change from Above and Below: Bihar 1947-78
    • N. K. Chandra, Agricultural Workers in Burdwan
    • Dipesh Chakrabarty, Conditions for Knowledge of Working-Class Conditions: Employers, Government and the Jute Workers of Calcutta, 1890-1940
    • Partha Chatterjee, More on Modes of Power and Peasantry
  • Ranajit Guha (ed.), "Subaltern Studies. Writings on South Asian History and Society", No. 3, Oxford University Press, Delhi, 1984.

    • Shahid Amin, Gandhi as Mahatma: Gorakhpur District, Eastern UP, 1921-1922
    • David Arnold, Famine in Peasant Consciousness and Peasant Action: Madras, 1876-1878
    • Dipesh Chakrabarty, Trade Unions in a Hierarchical Culture: The Jute Workers of Calcutta, 1920-1950
    • Partha Chatterjee, Gandhi and the Critique of Civil Society
    • David Hardiman, Adivasi Assertion in South Gujarat: The Devi Movement of 1922-1923
    • Gyanendra Pandey, 'Encounters and Calamities': The History of a North Indian Qasba in the Nineteenth Century
    • Sumit Sarkar, The Conditions and Nature of Subaltern Militancy: Bengal from Swadeshi to Non-Co-operation, c.1905-1922
  • Ranajit Guha (ed.), "Subaltern Studies. Writings on South Asian History and Society", No. 4, Oxford University Press, Delhi, 1985.

    • David Arnold, Bureaucratic Recruitment and Subordination in Colonial India: The Madras Constabulary, 1859-1947
    • Ramachandra Guha, Forestry and Social Protest in British Kumaun, c. 1893-1921
    • Swapan Dasgupta, Adivasi Politics in Midnapur, c. 1760-1924
    • Tanika Sarkar, Jitu Santal's Movement in Malda, 1924-1932: A Study in Tribal Protest
    • David Hardiman, South Gujarat, From Custom to Crime: The Politics of Drinking in Colonial
    • Gautam Bhadra, Four Rebels of Eighteen-Fifty-Seven
    • Bernard S. Cohn, The Command of Language and the Language of Command

    Discussions

    • Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Subaltern Studies: Deconstructing Historiography
    • Dipesh Chakrabarty, Invitation to a Dialogue
  • Ranajit Guha (ed.), "Subaltern Studies. Writings on South Asian History and Society", No. 5, Oxford University Press, Delhi, 1987.

    • David Hardiman, The Bhils and Shahukars of Eastern Gujarat
    • David Arnold, Touching the Body: Perspectives on the Indian Plague, 1896-1900
    • Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, A Literary Representation of the Subaltern: Mahasweta Devi's 'Stanadayini'
    • Ranajit Guha, Chandra's Death
    • Shahid Amin, Approver's Testimony, Judicial Discourse: The Case of Chauri Chaura

    Discussions

    • Asok Sen, Subaltern Studies: Capital, Class and Community
    • Ajit K. Chaudhury, In Search of a Subaltern Lenin

    Appendix A

    • Mahsweta Devi, 'Breast-Giver' (translated by Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak)

    Appendix B

    • The Testimony of Shikari, the Approver, in the Court of Sessions Judge H.E. Holmes
  • Ranajit Guha (ed.), "Subaltern Studies. Writings on South Asian History and Society", No. 6, Oxford University Press, Delhi, 1989.

    • Sumit Sarkar, The Kalki-Avatar of Bikrampur: A Village Scandal in Early Twentieth Century Bengal
    • Gautam Bhadra, The Mentality of Subalternity: Kantanama or Rajdharma
    • Julie Stephens, Feminist Fictions: A Critique of the Category 'Non-Western Woman' in Feminist Writings on India
    • Susie Tharu, Response to Julie Stephens
    • Gyanendra Pandey, The Colonial Construction of 'Communalism': British Writings on Banaras in the Nineteenth Century
    • Partha Chatterjee, Caste and Subaltern Consciousness
    • Ranajit Guha, Dominance Without Hegemony and Its Historiography

    Discussion

    • Veena Das, Subaltern as Perspective
  • Partha Chatterjee and Gyanendra Pandey (eds.), "Subaltern Studies. Writings on South Asian History and Society", No. 7, Oxford University Press, Delhi, 1993

    • Sudipta Kaviraj, The Imaginary Institution of India
    • Partha Chatterjee, A Religion of Urban Domesticity: Sri Ramakrishna and the Calcutta Middle Class
    • Ranajit Guha, Discipline and Mobilize
    • Saurabh Dube, Myths, Symbols and Community: Satnampanth of Chhattisgarh
    • Amitav Ghosh, The Slave of MS. H.6
    • Terence Ranger, Power, Religion and Community: The Matobo Case

    Discussion

    • Upendra Baxi, 'The State's Emissary: The Place of Law in Subaltern Studies
  • David Arnold and David Hardiman (eds.), "Subaltern Studies. Writings on South Asian History and Society", No. 8, Oxford University Press, Delhi, 1994

    • Partha Chatterjee, Claims on the Past: The Genealogy of Modern Historiography in Bengal
    • Dipesh Chakrabarty, The Difference-Deferral of a Colonial Modernity: Public Debates on Domesticity in British India
    • David Hardiman, Power in the Forests: The Dangs, 1820-1940
    • David Arnold, The Colonial Prison: Power, Knowledge and Penology in Nineteenth-Century India
    • Gyanendra Pandey, The Prose of Otherness
    • Shahid amin and Gautam Bhadra, Ranajit Guha: A Biographical Sketch
    • A Bibliography of Ranajit Guha's Writings (compiled by Gautam Bhadra)
  • Shahid Amin and Dipesh Chakrabarty (eds.), "Subaltern Studies. Writings on South Asian History and Society", No. 9, Oxford University Press, Delhi, 1996 [Reviews - B. Bose 1997].

    • Ranajit Guha, The Small Voice of History
    • Ajay Skaria, Writing, Orality and Power in the Dangs, Western India, 1800s-1920s
    • Gyan Prakash, Science between the Lines
    • Kamala Visweswaran, Small Speeches, Subaltern Gender: Nationalist Ideology and Its Historiography
    • Shail Mayaram, Speech, Silence and the Making of Partition Violence in Mewat
    • Kancha Illaih, Productive Labour, Consciousness and History: The Dalitbahujan Alternative
    • Vivek Dhareshwar and R. Srivatsan, 'Rowdy-sheeters': An Essay on Subalternity and Politics
    • Susie Tharu and Tejaswini Niranjana, Problems for a Contemporary Theory of Gender
    • David Lloyd, Outside History: Irish New Histories and the 'Subalternity Effect'
  • Gautam Bhadra, Gyan Prakash, and Susie Tharu (eds.), "Subaltern Studies. Writings on South Asian History and Society", No. 10, Oxford University Press, Delhi, 1999 [Reviews - Prathama Banerjee 1999].

    • Sudesh Mishra, Diaspora and the Difficult Art of Dying
    • Kaushik Ghosh, A Market for Aboriginality: Primitivism and Race Classification in the Indentured Labour Market of Colonial India
    • Indrani Chatterjee, Colouring Subalternity: Slaves, Concubines and Social Orphans in Early Colonial India
    • Ishita Banerjee Dube, Taming Traditions: Legalities and Histories in Twentieth-Century Orissa
    • Sundar Kaali, Spatializing History: Subaltern Carnivalizations of Space in Tiruppuvanam, Tamil Nadu
    • Vijay Prashad, Untouchable Freedom: A Critique of the Bourgeois Landlord Indian State
    • Christopher Pinney, Indian Magical Realism: Notes on Popular Visual Culture
    • Rosemary Sayigh, Gendering the 'Nationalist Subject': Palestinian Camp Women's Life Stories

Principali volumi miscellanei e antologici, corredati dagli indici

  • Ranajit Guha, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak (eds.), [introduction by Edward W. Said], Selected Subaltern Studies, Oxford University Press, Delhi, 1988 (parzialmente tradotto in italiano, sotto la cura di Sandro Mezzadra: Ranajit Guha, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Subaltern Studies. Modernità e (post)colonialismo, Ombre Corte, Verona, 2002.)

    • Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Subaltern Studies: Deconstructing Historiography

    I. Methodology

    • Ranajit Guha, Preface
    • Ranajit Guha, On Some Aspects of the Historiography of Colonial India
    • Ranajit Guha, The Prose of Counter-Insurgency

    II. From Mughal to British

    • Gyanendra Pandey, Encounters and Calamities
    • Gautam Bhadra, Four Rebels of Eighteen-Fifty-Seven

    III. Domination Analysis in the Pre-Capitalist Context

    • Dipesh Chakrabarty, Conditions for Knowledge of Working-Class Conditions

    IV. Nationalism: Gandhi As Signifier

    • Gyanendra Pandey, Peasant Revolt and Indian Nationalism
    • Shahid Amin, Gandhi as Mahatma

    V. Developing Foucault

    • Partha Chatterjee, More on Modes of Power and the Peasantry
    • David Arnold, Touching the Body: Perspectives on the Indian Plague
  • Guha, Ranajit (ed.), A Subaltern Studies Reader: 1986-1995, University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, 1998.

    • Ranajit Guha, In Defense of the Fragment: Writing about Hindu-Muslim Riots in India Today
    • Gyanendra Pandey
    • Ranajit Guha, Chandra's Death
    • Gautam Bhadra, The Mentality of Subalternity: Kantanama or Rajdharma
    • David Hardiman, Origins and Transformations of the Devi
    • David Arnold, The Colonial Prision: Power, Knowledge, and Penology in Nineteenth-Century India
    • Shahid Amin, Remembering Chauri Chaura: Notes from Historical Fieldwork
    • Partha Chatterjee, The Nation and Its Women
    • Postcoloniality and the Artifice of History
    • Dipesh Chakrabarty, Who Speaks for "Indian" Pasts?
  • Partha Chatterjee and Pradeep Jeganathan (eds.), Community, Gender and Violence, Columbia University Press, New York, 2000 (considerato l'XI volume dei "Subaltern Studies")

    • Aamir R. Mufti, A Greater Story-writer than God: Genre, Gender and Minority in Late Colonial India
    • Pradeep Jeganathan, A Space for Violence: Anthropology, Politics and the Location of a Sinhala Practice of Masculinity
    • Nivedita Menon, Embodying the Self Feminism, Sexual Violence and the Law
    • Flavia Agnes, Women, Marriage, and the Subordination of Rights
    • Tejaswini Niranjana, Nationalism Refigured: Contemporary South Indian Cinema and the Subject of Feminism
    • Satish Deshpande, Hegemonic Spatial Strategies: The Nation-Space and Hindu Communalism in Twentieth-century India
    • Qadri Ismail, Constituting Nation, Contesting Nationalism: The Southern Tamil (Woman) and Separatist Tamil Nationalism in Sri Lanka
    • David Scott, Toleration and Historical Traditions of Difference

    Discussion

    • Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, An Afterword on the New Subaltern
  • David Ludden (ed.), Reading Subaltern Studies. Critical History, Contested Meaning and the Globalization of South Asia, Anthem South Asia Studies, London, 2002

    • David Ludden, Introduction: A Brief of Subalternity

    I. Early Critiques in India

    • Jeeved Alam, Pesantry, Politics, and Historiography: Critique of New Trend in Relation to Marxism
    • Sangeeta Singh, Minakshi Menon, Pradeep Kumar Datta, Biswamoy Pati, Radhakanta Barik, Radhika Chopra, Partha Dutta, Sanjay Prasad, Subaltern Studies II: A review Article
    • Ranajit Das Gupta, Significance of Non-subaltern Mediation
    • B.B. Chaudhuri, Subaltern Autonomy and the National Movement

    II. Critical Incorporation in the Global Academy

    • Rosalind O'Hanlon, Recovering the Subject: Subaltern Studies and the Histories of Resistance in Colonial South Asia
    • Jim Masselon, The Dis/apparence of Subalterns: A Reading of a Decade of Subaltern Studies
    • K. Sivaramakrishna, Situating the Subaltern: History and Anthropology in the Subaltern Studies Project
    • Freederick Cooper, Conflict and Connection: Rethinking Colonial African History
    • Henry Schwarz, Subaltern Studies: Radical History in the Methaphoric Mode

    III. Later Critiques in India

    • K. Balagopal, Drought and TADA in Adilabad
    • Vinay Bahl, Relevance (or Irrelevance) of Subaltern Studies
    • Sumit Sarkar, The Decline of the Subalter in Subaltern Studies
    • Mignolo, Walter D., Local Histories/Global Designs Coloniality, Subaltern Knowledges, and Border Thinking, Princeton University Press, Princeton, 2000.

Monografie

  • AA.VV., La question identitaire en Asie du Sud, Purushartha, Edition de l'école des hautes études en sciences sociales, Paris, sous presse
  • Amin, Shahid, Event, Metaphor, Memory: Chauri Chaura, 1922-1992, University of California Press, Berkeley, 1995.
  • ---, Some Considerations on Evidence, Language and History, Indian History Congress, Delhi, 1994.
  • ---, Sugarcane and Sugar in Gorakhpur: An Inquiry into Peasant Production for Capitalist Enterprise in Colonial India, Oxford University Press India, Delhi, 1984.
  • Arnold, David, Colonizing the Body: State Medicine and Epidemic Disease in Nineteenth-Century India, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993.
  • Arnold, David, Famine: Social Crisis and Historical Change, Basil Blackwell, Oxford, 1988.
  • ---, Police, Power and Colonial Rule: Madras, 1859-1947, Oxford University Press India, Delhi, 1986.
  • ---, The Problem of Nature: Environment, Culture and European Expansion, Basil Blackwell, Oxford, 1996.
  • Benslama, Fethi, Une fiction troublante. De l'origine en partage, Eds. de l'aube, Paris, 1994.
  • Butalia, Urvashi, The other Side of Silence. Voices from the Partition of India, Viking, Delhi, 1998.
  • Beverley, John, Subalternity and Representation Arguments in Cultural Theory, Duke University Press, Durham (North Carolina), 1999.
  • Canizares-Esguerra, Jorge, How to Write the History of the New World. Histories, Epistemologies, and Identities in the Eighteenth-Century Atlantic World, Stanford University Press, 2002.
  • Chakrabarty, Dipesh, Rethinking Working-Class History: Bengal, 1890-1940, Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1989.
  • ---, Habitations of Modernity Essays in the Wake of Subaltern Studies, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 2002.
  • Chatterjee, Partha, Bengal, 1920-1947: The Land Question, K.P. Bagchi and Company, Calcutta, 1984.
  • ---, The Nation and Its Fragments: Colonial and Postcolonial Histories, Oxford University Press India, Delhi, 1995.
  • ---, Nationalist Thought and The Colonial World: A Derivative Discourse? Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1986.
  • ---, A Possible India: Essays in Political Criticism, Oxford University Press India, Delhi, 1997.
  • ---, The Present History of West Bengal: Essays in Political Criticism, Oxford University Press India, Delhi, 1997.
  • Chaturvedi Vinayak, Mapping Subaltern Studies and the Postcolonial, Verso, London, 2000.
  • Cohn, Bernard S., An Anthropologist Among the Historians and Other Essays, Oxford University Press India, Delhi, 1987.
  • ---, Colonialism and Its Forms of Knowledge, Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1996.
  • Guha, Ranajit, Dominance without Hegemony: History and Power in Colonial India, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, 1997.
  • ---, Elementary Aspects of Peasant Insurgency in Colonial India, Delhi: Oxford University Press India, 1983.
  • ---, An Indian Historiography of India: A Nineteenth Century Agenda and Its Implications, K.P. Bagchi and Company, Calcutta, 1988.
  • Hardiman, David, The Coming of the Devi: Adivasi Assertion in Western India, Oxford University Press India, Delhi, 1987.
  • ---, Feeding the Baniya: Peasants and Usurers in Western India, Oxford University Press India, Delhi, 1996.
  • Kaviraj, Sudipta, The Unhappy Consciousness: Bankimchandra Chattopadhyay and the Formation of Nationalist Discourse in India, Oxford University Press, Delhi, 1995.
  • Mayaram, Shail, Resisting Regimes: Myth, Memory and the Shaping of a Muslim Identity, Oxford University Press, Delhi, 1997.
  • Mignolo, Walter D., Local Histories/Global Designs Coloniality, Subaltern Knowledges, and Border Thinking, Princeton University Press, Princeton, 2000.
  • Pandey, Gyanendra, The Construction of Communalism in Colonial North India, Oxford University Press India, Delhi, 1990.
  • Pandian, M.S.S., The Image Trap: M.G. Ramachandran in Film and Politics, Sage Publications, New Delhi, 1992.
  • Pouchepadass, Jacques; Puyravaud, J.P. (éd.), L'homme et la forêt en Inde du Sud: modes de gestion et symbolisme de la forêt dans les Ghâts occidentaux, Karthala/IFP, Paris, sous presse.
  • Pouchepadass, Jacques; Stern, H. (éd.), De la royauté à l'Etat: anthropologie et histoire du politique dans le monde indien, Editions de l'EHESS, Paris, 1991.
  • Pouchepadass, Jacques, Planteurs et paysans dans l'Inde coloniale: l'indigo du Bihar et le mouvement gandhien du Champaran (1917-18), L'Harmattan, Paris, 1986.
  • ---, Paysans de la plaine du Gange: croissance agricole et société dans le district de Champaran, (Bihar), 1860-1950, Ecole Française d'Extrême-Orient, Paris, 1989.
  • Prakash, Gyan, Bonded Histories: Genealogies of Labour Servitude in Colonial India, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1990.
  • Rodriguez, Ileana (ed.), The Latin American Subaltern Studies Reader (Latin America Otherwise), Duke University Press, Durham (North Carolina), 2001.
  • Sarkar, Sumit, Writing Social History, Oxford University Press India, Delhi, 1997.

Articoli e recensioni

  • Alam, Javeed, "Peasantry, Politics and Historiography: Critique of New Trend in Relation to Marxism", in Social Scientist, 117, Vol. 11, 2 (February 1983), pp. 43-54.
  • Alam, S.M. Shamsul, "When will the subaltern speak?: central issues in historical sociology of South Asia", in Asian Profile (Hong Kong) 21, no. 5 (Oct 1993), pp. 431-447.
  • Apffel-Marglin, Frederique; Mishra, Purna Chandra, "Gender and the unitary self: looking for the subaltern in coastal Orissa", in South Asia Research (London) 15, no. 1 (Spr 1995), pp. 78-130.
  • Arnold, David, "Gramsci and Peasant Subalternity in India", in Journal of Peasant Studies 11, 4 (1984), pp. 155-177.
  • Bagchi, Alakananda, "Conflicting Nationalisms: The Voice of the Subaltern in Mahasweta Devi's Bashai Tudu", in Tulsa studies in women's literature v.15:no.1 (1996), pp. 41-50.
  • Bahl, Vinay, "Relevance (Or Irrelevance) of Subaltern Studies", inEconomic and Political Weekly v. 32, no. 23 (1997), pp. 1333-1344.
  • Banerjee, Prathama, "The subaltern-effect: negation to deconstruction hybridity?", in Biblio, May-June 1999, pp. 17-18. [recensione a "Subaltern studies", vol. X]
  • Barkan, Elazar, "Post-anti-colonial histories: Representing the Other in Imperial Britain", in Journal of British Studies 33, 2 (April 1994), pp. 180-204.
  • Bayly, C.A, "Rallying around the Subaltern", in Journal of Peasant Studies 16, 1 (1988), pp. 110-120.
  • Beverley, John, "What Happens When the Subaltern Speaks: Rigoberta Menchú, Multiculturalism, and the Presumption of Equal", in Arturo Arias (ed.), The Rigoberta Menchú Controversy, University Press of Minnesota, Minneapolis-London, 2001, pp. 219-236.
  • Bhabha, Homi K, "The Voice of the Dom", in TLS. The Times Literary Supplement, no. 4923 (8 August 1997), pp. 14-15. [recensione a "Subaltern studies", vol. IX]
  • ---, "The Postcolonial and Postmodern: The Question of Agency", in The Location of Culture, Routledge, London, 1994, pp.171-197.
  • Bhattacharya, Nandini, "Behind the veil: the many masks of subaltern sexuality", in Women's Studies International Forum, v. 19 (May/June 1996), pp. 277-92.
  • Bose, Brinda, "Contemporary Problems Routed through History", in The Book Review. v. 21, no. 6 (June 1997), pp. 5-7. [recensione a "Subaltern studies", vol. IX]
  • Brass, Tom, "Moral Economists, Subalterns, New Social Movements, and the (Re-) Emergence of a (Post-) Modernised (Middle), peasant", in Journal of Peasant Studies 18, 2 (January 1991), pp. 173-205.
  • Brennan, Lance, Book Review, in Pacific Affairs, 57, 3 (Fall 1984), pp. 509-511.
  • Chakrabarty, Dipesh, Book Review, Journal of Asian Studies 50, 4 (November, 1991), pp. 968-970.
  • ---, "The Death of History", in Public Culture, v. 4, no. 2 (1992), pp.47-65.
  • ---, "Marx after Marxism: History, Subalternity and Difference", in Meanjin 52 (Spring 1993), pp. 421-434; anche in Positions: East Asia Cultures Critique (Durham) 2, no. 2 (Fall 1994), pp. 446-463; anche in Saree Makdisi, Cesare Casarino, Rebecca E. Karl (eds.), Marxism Beyond Marxism, Routledge, New York, 1996, pp. 55-69.
  • ---, "Marx After Marxism: Subaltern Histories and the Question of Difference", in Polygraph 6/7 (1993), pp. 10-16.
  • ---, "Marx after Marxism: A Subaltern Historian's Perspective", in Economic and Political Weekly, v. 28, no. 22 (29 May 1993), pp. 1094-1096.
  • ---, "Minority Histories, Subaltern Pasts", in Economic and Political Weekly, in v. 33, no. 9 (28 February 1998), pp. 473-479.
  • ---, "Postcoloniality and the Artifice of History: Who Speaks for 'Indian' Pasts?", in Representations, no. 37 (Winter 1992), pp. 1-26.
  • ---, "Radical Histories and Question of Enlightenment Rationalism: Some Recent Critiques of Subaltern Studies", in Economic and Political Weekly, v. 30, no. 14 (8 April 1995), pp. 751-759.
  • ---, "Trafficking in History and Theory", in Beyond the Disciplines: The New Humanities, K.K. Ruthven ed., Canberra, 1992.
  • Chatterjee, Partha, "History and the Nationalization of Hinduism", in Vasudha Dalmia, H. von Stietencron (eds.), Representing Hinduism, Sage Publications, New Delhi, 1995, pp.103-128.
  • ---, "Peasant, Politics and Historiography: A Response", in Social Scientist, 120, v. 11, no. 5 (May 1983), pp. 58-65.
  • ---, "Subaltern Studies VII: Writings on South Asian History and Society", in The Journal of interdisciplinary history, v. 26 (1995).
  • ---, "Was There a Hegemonic Project of the Colonial State?", in Dagmar Engels, Shula Marks (eds.), Contesting Colonial Hegemony: State & Society in Africa and India, British Academic Press, London, 1994, pp.79-84.
  • Chaudhury, B.B, "Subaltern autonomy and the national movement", in Indian Historical Review (New Delhi) 12, nos. 1-2 (Jul 1985 - Jan 1986), pp. 391-399.
  • Chopra, Suneet, "Missing Correct Perspective", in Social Scientist 111, vol. 10, no. 8 (August 1982), pp. 55-63. [recensione a "Subaltern studies", vol. I]
  • Cooper, Frederick, "Conflict and Connection: Rethinking African History", in American Historical Review 99 (Dec. 1994), pp. 1516-1545.
  • Copland, Ian, "Subalternative history: reflections on the Conference on the Subaltern in South Asian History and Society, Canberra, 26-28 November 1982", in ASAA Review (Canberra) 6, no. 3 (Apr 1983), pp. 10-17.
  • Currie, Kate, "The Challenge to Orientalist, Elitist, and Western Historiography: Notes on the 'Subaltern Project', 1982-1989", in Dialectical anthropology, v. 20, no. 2 (1995), pp. 217.
  • Das Gupta, Ranajit, "Indian Working Class and Some Recent Historiographical Issues", in Economic and Political Weekly 31,8 (24 Feb 1996), pp. L-27-L-31.
  • ---, "Significance of non-subaltern mediation", in Indian Historical Review (New Delhi) 12, nos. 1-2 (Jul 1985 - Jan 1986), pp. 383-390.
  • Dhanagare, D.N., "Subaltern consciousness and populism: two approaches in the study of social movements in India", in Social Scientist (New Delhi) 16, no. 11 (Nov 1988), pp. 18-35.
  • Dienst, Richard, "Imperialism, Subalternity, Autonomy: Modes of Third World Historiography", in Polygraph 1 (1987), pp. 67-80.
  • Freitag, Sandria, Journal of Asian Studies 43, 4 (August 1984), pp. 779-780. [Recensione]
  • Gudmundson, Lowell; Scarano, Francisco, "Imagining the Future for the Subaltern Past: Fragments of Race, Class, and Gender in Central America and the Hispanic Caribbean, 1860-1950", in Aviva Chomsky, Aldo Lauria-Santiago (eds.), At the Margins of the Nation- State: Identity and Struggle in the Making of the Laboring Peoples of Central America and the Hispanic, Caribbean, 1860-1950, Duke University Press, Durham (North Carolina), forthcoming.
  • Guha, Ramachandra, [recensione a "Subaltern studies", voll. V e VI] in Indian Economic and Social History Review, 28, 1 (1991), pp. 116-118.
  • ---, "Subaltern and Bhadralok Studies", in Economic and Political Weekly 30, (19 August 1995), pp. 2056-2058.
  • Gupta, Dipankar, "On Altering the Ego in Peasant History: Paradoxes of the Ethnic Option", in Peasant Studies, 13, 1 (Fall 1985), pp. 5-24.
  • Hardiman, David, "'Subaltern Studies' at Crossroads", in Economic and Political Weekly, 21 (15 February 1986), pp. 288-290.
  • Hauser, Walter, [recensione a Selected Subaltern Studies], in American Historical Review, 96, 1 (February 1991), pp. 241-243.
  • ---, [recensione a "Subaltern studies", vol. VI], in The Journal of Asian Studies, v. 50 (Nov. '91), pp. 968-9.
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