Module Identifier IPM1730  
Module Title POSTCOLONIAL POL 1: POWER, DEVELOPMENT, DEMOCRACY (S)  
Academic Year 2005/2006  
Co-ordinator Professor Jenny Edkins  
Semester Intended for use in future years  
Next year offered N/A  
Next semester offered N/A  
Mutually Exclusive IPM1720 , IPM1330 , IPM1320  
Course delivery Seminars / Tutorials   (1 x 2 hour seminars per week)  
Assessment
Assessment TypeAssessment Length/DetailsProportion
Semester Assessment Essay: 1 x 4,500 words  70%
Semester Assessment Essay: 1 x 2,000 words  30%
Supplementary Exam Students may, subject to Faculty approval, have the opportunity to resit this module, normally during the supplementary examination period. For further clarification please contact the Teaching Programme Administrator in the Department of International Politics. 

Learning outcomes

By the end of the module students will be able to:

- discuss the notion of the postcolonial or postcoloniality
- analyse in detail power relations and discursive practices in particular postcolonial contexts
- discuss critically and in depth questions of power, development or democracy in a postcolonial setting

Brief description

This module provides the first part of an introduction to postcolonial politics.

Aims

The module introduces students to Foucauldian concepts of power and discourse and examines the use of these concepts in the study of development and democracy in a postcolonial context.

Content

The first seminar examines the meanings of the term postcolonialism. The next three seminars introduce Foucauldian concepts of power and discourse. These are followed then by three seminars on development and three on democracy. In each case we examine traditional approaches and challenges to those from a discursive or Foucauldian framework. Each block of three seminars includes a specific case study.

Transferable skills

The module will require and develop transferable skills such as teamwork (through the use of student-led seminars), individual writing and analytic skills and time management (through the preparation of essays); critical reading and analysis (through the preparation for weekly seminars); debating and facilitating skills and the ability to express themselves on complex topics in an understandable way (through the seminar discussions).

15 ECTS credits

Reading Lists

Books
Frans Fanon The Wretched of the Earth Penguin
Alan Sheridan Michael Foucault: The Will to Truth Routledge
Michael Foucault Discipline and Punish Penguin
Loomba, A (1998) Colonialism/Postcolonialism Routledge

Notes

This module is at CQFW Level 7