The theme of paradise or better the paradise lost, understood as the Garden of Eden where natural harmony, innocence and principles of liberty reigned, is developed by the writer J.M.G. Le Clézio with a certain obsession. Different within his work are the geographical points which from time to time adapt to represent this topos; but one in particular repeats consistently: it is the island of Mauritius. A curious relationship unites the author to this island – from which his parents and relatives were unjustly exiled – beginning from the typical Mauritian education he received, even though born and grown up in France. The feeling with which Le Clézio approaches the island, until today by the majority considered a paradise on Earth, differs i...
Since the beginning of Time, the island has revealed itself as a protective and dangerous space, at ...
Michel Houellebecq has encouraged the French press and media to cast him as an isolated writer with ...
There is no obvious connection between such opposite cities. Ys and Carthage are settled on ends apa...
The theme of paradise or better the paradise lost, understood as the Garden of Eden where natural ha...
The privileged space that an island represents is an integral part of the landscapes described by Le...
The island is the main location of the three Mauritian works of J.M.G. Le Clézio (Le Chercheur d'or,...
Ex oriente lux? From the Southern Tropics in any case, since certain myths from former times, forgot...
Numerous studies have been devoted to the Lays of Marie de France, but few consider the Lays as a co...
African-American writer John Edgar Wideman chose the French Caribbean island of Martinique as settin...
This article analyses the image of Africa presented in Le Clézio’s novels. The author claims that a ...
On the adventurous paths that mark Julien Gracq’s fictional worlds, the heroes are often subjected t...
The article interprets the novel There is a Tide by Lindsey Collen against the background of her ar...
Le Clézio, auteur contemporain, écrit depuis son enfance, qui est devenue le sujet même de son œuvre...
Pierre Benoit’s novel L’ïle Verte is interesting not only because the story takes place in an island...
Mauritius in Heritage : Descriptions of the Island in Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clézio’s Work. Many Lec...
Since the beginning of Time, the island has revealed itself as a protective and dangerous space, at ...
Michel Houellebecq has encouraged the French press and media to cast him as an isolated writer with ...
There is no obvious connection between such opposite cities. Ys and Carthage are settled on ends apa...
The theme of paradise or better the paradise lost, understood as the Garden of Eden where natural ha...
The privileged space that an island represents is an integral part of the landscapes described by Le...
The island is the main location of the three Mauritian works of J.M.G. Le Clézio (Le Chercheur d'or,...
Ex oriente lux? From the Southern Tropics in any case, since certain myths from former times, forgot...
Numerous studies have been devoted to the Lays of Marie de France, but few consider the Lays as a co...
African-American writer John Edgar Wideman chose the French Caribbean island of Martinique as settin...
This article analyses the image of Africa presented in Le Clézio’s novels. The author claims that a ...
On the adventurous paths that mark Julien Gracq’s fictional worlds, the heroes are often subjected t...
The article interprets the novel There is a Tide by Lindsey Collen against the background of her ar...
Le Clézio, auteur contemporain, écrit depuis son enfance, qui est devenue le sujet même de son œuvre...
Pierre Benoit’s novel L’ïle Verte is interesting not only because the story takes place in an island...
Mauritius in Heritage : Descriptions of the Island in Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clézio’s Work. Many Lec...
Since the beginning of Time, the island has revealed itself as a protective and dangerous space, at ...
Michel Houellebecq has encouraged the French press and media to cast him as an isolated writer with ...
There is no obvious connection between such opposite cities. Ys and Carthage are settled on ends apa...