Recent years have seen a resurgence of scholarly interest across disciplines around the concept creolization even as there has been some pushback against this development in other academic quarters. This article contextualizes this state of art around creolization and presents an analytical overview of the term's discursive history. First, I discuss the appearance of the term creole in several areas of the world as an epiphenomenon of the first wave of European expansionism from the fifteenty century onward. Second, I track the emergence of Creole as an analytical category within nineteenth-century philology and its further development within linguistics. Third, I focus on milestones in the move of creole to creolization as a category for theorists of culture. Finally, I discuss recuperations of creolization as a theoretical model, including my own work that articulates it together with theoretical approaches to archipelagos.
CITATION STYLE
Kabir, A. J. (2023). The Creolizing Turn and Its Archipelagic Directions. Cambridge Journal of Postcolonial Literary Inquiry, 10(1), 90–103. https://doi.org/10.1017/pli.2022.31
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