“When colonial discourse encourages the colonial subject to ‘mimic’ the colonizer, by adopting the colonizer’s cultural habits, assumptions, institutions and values, the result is never a simple reproduction of those traits. Rather, the result is a ‘blurred copy’ of the colonizer that can be quite threatening”(Bill Ashcroft 139).
Bhabha further delineates mimicry in the term of ambivalence as similar and dissimilar. Similarity defines its resemblance to the masters, colonized subjects to be like masters and dissimilarity: “a difference that is almost the same, but not quite” (Bhabha 86). In his essay “Of Mimicry and Man,” Bhabha describes mimicry as sometimes unintentionally subversive. …show more content…
He died on 27th April 27, 1937, in Rome. He is an intellectual and politician, and the founder of the Italian Communist Party whose ideas greatly influenced Italian communism. He studied in the University of Turin where he joined the Socialist Youth Federation and later the Socialist party in 1914. During World War I he studied Marxist thought and became a prominent theoretician. He formed a leftist group within the Socialist Party and started the newspaper L’Ordine Nuovo in May 1919 named “The New Order”. Gramsci encouraged the development of factory councils, which challenged the control of trade unions. The councils participated in a general strike in Turin during 1920, in which Gramsci participated in a key