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NOTES

               historicism, in Political Shakespeare: new essays in cultural materialism
               (Manchester, Manchester University Press, 1985), p. 3.
            77. Easthope, Literary into cultural studies, pp. 119–23.
            78. T.Bennett et al. (eds.), Popular culture and social relations (Milton Keynes, Open
               University Press, 1986), p. vii.
            79. Easthope, Literary into cultural studies, p. 74.
            80. T.Bennett, Outside literature (London, Routledge, 1990).
            81. T.Bennett, Formalism and Marxism (London, Methuen, 1979).
            82. Bennett, Outside literature, p. 195.
            83. Ibid., p. 10.
            84. Ibid., p. 270.
            85. B.Ashcroft et al., The empire writes back: theory and practice in post-colonial
               literatures (London, Routledge, 1989).
            86. I.Adam & H.Tiffin (eds), Past the last post: theorizing post-colonialism and
               post-modernism (London, Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1991).
            87. Ashcroft et al., The empire writes back, p. 12.
            88. Ibid., p. 33.
            89. S.Gunew, Australia 1984: A moment in the archaeology of multiculturalism, in
               Europe and its others, vol. I, eds. F.Barker et al. (Colchester, University of Essex,
               1985), p. 188.
            90. E.W.Said, Orientalism (New York, Pantheon Books, 1978), p. 3.
            91. S.Hall et al., Policing the crisis: mugging, the state, and law and order (London,
               Macmillan, 1978).
            92. G.C.Spivak, Can the subaltern speak?, in Marxism and the interpretation of
               culture, eds. Nelson & Grossberg, p. 273.
            93. C.MacCabe, Foreword, in G.C.Spivak, In other worlds: essays in cultural politics
               (London, Methuen, 1987), p. ix.
            94. Spivak, In other worlds, pp. 206–7.
            95. Ibid., p. 209.
            96. N.Fraser, The french Derrideans: politicizing deconstruction or deconstructing
               the political?, New German Critique, 33, 1984, p. 133.
            97. Spivak, In other worlds, p. 208.
            98. E.P.Thompson, The long revolution, New Left Review, 9 and 10, 1961.
            99. E.Showalter, A criticism of our own: autonomy and assimilation in Afro-American
               and feminist literary theory, in The future of literary theory, ed. R.Cohen (London,
               Routledge, 1989), p. 369.
            100. cf. H.K.Bhabha, The other question: difference, discrimination and the
               discourse of colonialism, in Literature, politics and theory, eds. F.Barker et
               al. (London, Methuen, 1986); H.K.Bhabha, DissemiNation: time,
               narrative, and the margins of the modern nation, in Nation and narration,
               ed. H.K.Bhabha (London, Routledge, 1990); D. Chakrabarty, Rethinking
               working-class history Bengal 1890–1940 (Princeton, NJ, Princeton
               University Press, 1989).
            101. A.Ahmad, In theory: classes, nations, literatures (London, New Left Books,
               1992), pp. 92–3.
            102. Ibid., p. 94.
            103. cf. E.W.Said, After the last sky: Palestinian lives (London, Faber, 1986); E.W.Said,
               The question of Palestine (New York, Pantheon Books, 1979).
            104. T.Eagleton, A culture in crisis, The Guardian 3, 27 November 1992, p. 6.
            105. Ashcroft et al., The empire writes back, p. 2.
            106. In the closing lines of an 1823 sonnet addressed to Britannia herself, William
               Charles Wentworth had imagined his country’s future thus:


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