Nandita Sharma
Project title
The Figure of the Foreigner in Colonial, Anti-Colonial, and Postcolonial Thought and Practice
Research question
How and when did the figure of the foreigner become central to our understanding of processes of colonialism? How does centering foreignness shape anti-colonial and postcolonial social relations?
Project description
Nandita Sharma will study how the concept of “colonialism” is largely defined by the idea of “foreign rule” and how this affects contemporary politics of “decolonisation.”
Our world of nation-states promised to “end colonialism” by replacing colonisers with national sovereigns. Yet, everywhere, discourses of colonialism continue to be popular (for example, in ideas of neocolonialism, demands for decolonisation, and anti-migrant politics portraying migrants as colonisers).
Sharma asks how the centering of the figure of the Foreign Ruler in understandings of colonialism contributes to this. She also examines how the emphasis on foreign rule obscures the global terrain of capitalism while legitimising views that native or national rulers will secure political independence.
Expanding the definition of colonialism as practices rather than the foreignness or nationness of the rulers may allow us to see many more instances of colonialism thus far ignored, both historically and today. This may also reveal connections between people divided between imperial metropoles and colonies, thereby helping to undo many of the racist, nationalist, and patriarchal divisions amongst people and helping to undo ruling relations.
Selected publications
- Sharma, Nandita, 2020. Home Rule: National Sovereignty and the Separation of Natives and Migrants, Durham, NC: Duke University Press. ISBN: 978-1-4780-0095-2. [Book Discussion with Joseph Nevins]
- Sharma, Nandita, 2006. Home Economics: Nationalism and the Making of ‘Migrant Workers’ in Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN: 9780802048837
- “’Go Back to Where You Come From’: The National Re-Making of Racist Borders,” Citizenship Studies (accepted). 2026.
- “Border Abolition as Decolonization,” in Decolonising Migration Studies. Francis Collins, Koh Sin Yee, and Brenda S.A. Yeoh, eds. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing. 2026.
- “No Borders: Demands for Freedom of Movement in an Age of Nation-State,” in Border Abolitionism: Migrant Struggles and the Law. Nicholas De Genova and Daniel Morales, eds. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. 2026.