| Article Title |
Terraforming the Postcolonial Subject: A Critique of Clones, Neo-Colonial Power, and Identity crises in Imperial Earth |
| Author(s) | Naeem Majeed, Dr. Rajinder Singh Ahluwalia. |
| Country | India |
| Abstract |
The research paper expounds a postcolonial study of Arthur C. Clarke’s Imperial Earth (1975), installing the novel as an unacknowledged yet consequential work within postcolonial science fiction. Applying the theoretical frameworks from key postcolonial scholars such as Edward Said, Homi Bhabha, Frantz Fanon, and Gayatri Spivak, the study scrutinizes the novel’s depiction of colonial power dynamics, identity crises, and neo-colonial exploitation, emphasised through the dystopian setting of Titan’s colonization. Through the protagonist, Duncan Makenzie, the novel manifests the psychological and cultural struggles of a postcolonial subject, entangled between the hegemony of Earth and the marginalization of Titan. His journey embodies Fanonian trauma, Bhabha’s Third Space, and Spivak’s subaltern, demonstrating the fragmented selfhood of colonial subjects. The paper further critiques Titan’s hydrogen-based economy as a metaphor for neo-colonial power dynamics and resource extraction, encapsulating historical colonial exploitation in colonial terrains. The cloning subplot is unveiled as an embodiment of cultural reproduction, mimicry and third space, underscoring the inherent discrepancy and hybridity of postcolonial identity. Clarke’s narrative adventitiously critiques imperial hierarchies, offering a speculative but vibrant commentary on the persisting legacies of colonialism. Through its interdisciplinary approach, the study accentuates Imperial Earth’s significance as a contrapuntal text that bridges imperial heritage with postcolonial critique in science fiction. |
| Area | English |
| Issue | Volume 3, Issue 5 (May 2026) |
| Published | 2026/05/08 |
| How to Cite | Majeed, N. & Ahluwalia, R.S.. (2026). Terraforming the Postcolonial Subject: A Critique of Clones, Neo-Colonial Power, and Identity crises in Imperial Earth. ShodhPatra: International Journal of Science and Humanities, 3(5), 24-34, DOI: https://doi.org/10.70558/SPIJSH.2026.v3.i5.45718. |
| DOI | 10.70558/SPIJSH.2026.v3.i5.45718 |
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