ISSN 2041-3254

Journal-Reviews: books

Escape Routes: Control and Subversion in the 21st Century – Review

by Stephan Scheel • 21 Apr 2010

The central question of Escape Routes sounds quite simple: ‘How does social transformation begin?’ But the answer that the book provides is provocative and contests many dominant explanations of social change: according to the authors it is not the brimming revolutionary events occupying the imagination of the left that capture the mechanics of social transformation but the seemingly ‘insignificant occurrences of people’s daily actions’.


Digitizing Race – Lisa Nakamura

by Sanjay Sharma • 31 Mar 2010

For those of you with a soft spot for the anthropomorphized cartoon dog surfing the Internet, Lisa Nakamura abolishes such nostalgia, and misunderstanding. Half way through Digitizing Race, she coolly declares ‘…nobody believes anymore that on the Internet nobody knows you’re a dog…’.


Darker than Blue

by Ben Pitcher • 12 Mar 2010

Paul Gilroy carries a lot of symbolic weight. In our transnational academic milieu, Gilroy’s status as a superstar professor overdetermines his writing, forcing a peculiar disjuncture between the character of his project and the expectations of his eager audience. While Gilroy speaks of a poststructural cultural politics, he is too often forced into the position of custodian or leader that sometimes rubs up uncomfortably with his analysis…


“To be loved, of course, and to be safe”

by Denise Decaires Narain • 17 Jan 2009

Review of: Our Caribbean: A Gathering of Lesbian and Gay Writing from the Antilles, edited and with an introduction by Thomas Glave, Durham & London, Duke University Press, 2008.


The Empire of Love: Review of Elizabeth Povinelli

by Silvia Posocco • 2 May 2008

Nationality: Wog – The Hounding of David Oluwale

by Max Farrar • 16 Oct 2007

Review of: Kester Aspden (2007) Nationality: Wog – The Hounding of David Oluwale, London: Jonathan Cape

This is an important, even ‘must-read’ book for anyone interested in the history of crime in the UK, especially if that crime has…


Mobilizing India: Women, Music, and Migration between India and Trinidad

by Sanjay Sharma • 8 Sep 2007

Review of: Tejaswini Niranjana (2006) Mobilizing India: Women, Music, and Migration between India and Trinidad. London: Duke University Press.

Review can be read at anti-babel. (Due to copyright restrictions, this article can only appear on the reviewer’s own website).


Infidel: My Life

by Sara Wajid • 16 Aug 2007

Review of: Infidel: My Life (2007), Free Press.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali has hurled herself violently into the eye of the storm with her polemical pronouncements on the threat of political Islam, the dangers of multi-culturalism and the need for…


A Postcolonial People

by Katy Sian • 30 Jul 2007

A Review of: N. Ali, V. Kalra & S. Sayyid (eds) (2005) A Postcolonial People: South Asians in Britain. London: Hurst.

In Roland Barthes’s Mythologies, the last sentence of the book urges that we must seek “a reconciliation between reality…


“Londonstani” by Gautam Malkani; “Tourism” by Nirpal Singh Dhaliwal

by Anamik Saha • 14 Jun 2007

Review of: Gautam Malkani (2007) Londonstani, HarperPerennial; and Nirpal Singh Dhaliwal (2006) Tourism, Vintage.

With last year’s protests surrounding the filming of Monica Ali’s Brick Lane the debate on authenticity and representation yet again reared its head. It seems a…


Welcome to Gayatri World

by Vikram Kohli • 21 Mar 2007

Review of Gayatri Gopinath (2005) Impossible Desires: Queer Diasporas and South Asian Public, Duke Unvirsity Press.
Welcome to Gayatri World, a place of many myriad shining surfaces in which the globe is shrunk wrap into theoretically dazzling snippets…


The Problem with White Trash

by Ben Pitcher • 12 Mar 2007

This is a review of Matt Wray (2006) Not Quite White: White Trash and the Boundaries of Whiteness, Duke University Press.

Coming to prominence over the last decade, the critical study of whiteness has proven a welcome addition to…


Franz Fanon – Critical Perspectives

by Ash Sharma • 1 Mar 2007

Review of Anthony C. Alessandrini (ed) (1998) Franz Fanon – Critical Perspectives, Routledge.[1]

Since his untimely death at the age of 36 in 1961, the Martinician-born psychiatrist, writer and revolutionary Frantz Fanon has become something of a looming spectre…