This article examines themes of madness and mental illness in fictional and non-fictional writing by Guadeloupean author Gisèle Pineau. Madness is an important trope in French Caribbean literature that critiques the enduring legacies of colonization, slavery and forced displacement. It is a prevalent theme in Pineau’s work because her writing is inspired by her parallel career as a psychiatric nurse. The article explores madness from a gendered perspective in her short stories “Ombres créoles” (1988) and “Ta mission, Marny” (2009). Arguing that here, madness is a specifically Antillean condition that both erases the agency of the female protagonists and grants them power to resist, the article then examines how Pineau explores the theme fr...
Elizabeth Nunez is a Trinidadian author, critic, and professor who explores the development of femal...
My dissertation examines the fictional representation of madness, what I have called literary maniag...
French Caribbean along with other Third World intellectuals have examined from different perspective...
Globally and historically, madness appears as a prominent socio-medical concern that also occupies a...
This article links Glissant\u27s theory of an inherent Caribbean madness due to the originary ruptur...
My dissertation Folie et stratégies d\u27évasion dans les romans postcoloniaux au Maghreb (Maroc-A...
This study seeks to examine the character of the madwoman in Caribbean literature in three novels: J...
This research seeks to investigate the lang...
This study seeks to examine the character of the madwoman in Caribbean literature in three novels: J...
In this article, I explore the question of madness and feminism as presented by Ken Bugul in La foli...
This article analyses the symbiotic relationship between Lucy Snowe’s madness and isolation in Charl...
Voicelessness, alienation, confinement, deracination, rupture, exclusion, madness and exile: the the...
In her article Odile Ferly considers the literary movement of Créolité. This arose in the French Car...
peer reviewedCaribbean literature is replete with migrant figures that are viewed when they go abroa...
The novels Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys and Nervous Conditions by Tsitsi Dangarembga break the sil...
Elizabeth Nunez is a Trinidadian author, critic, and professor who explores the development of femal...
My dissertation examines the fictional representation of madness, what I have called literary maniag...
French Caribbean along with other Third World intellectuals have examined from different perspective...
Globally and historically, madness appears as a prominent socio-medical concern that also occupies a...
This article links Glissant\u27s theory of an inherent Caribbean madness due to the originary ruptur...
My dissertation Folie et stratégies d\u27évasion dans les romans postcoloniaux au Maghreb (Maroc-A...
This study seeks to examine the character of the madwoman in Caribbean literature in three novels: J...
This research seeks to investigate the lang...
This study seeks to examine the character of the madwoman in Caribbean literature in three novels: J...
In this article, I explore the question of madness and feminism as presented by Ken Bugul in La foli...
This article analyses the symbiotic relationship between Lucy Snowe’s madness and isolation in Charl...
Voicelessness, alienation, confinement, deracination, rupture, exclusion, madness and exile: the the...
In her article Odile Ferly considers the literary movement of Créolité. This arose in the French Car...
peer reviewedCaribbean literature is replete with migrant figures that are viewed when they go abroa...
The novels Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys and Nervous Conditions by Tsitsi Dangarembga break the sil...
Elizabeth Nunez is a Trinidadian author, critic, and professor who explores the development of femal...
My dissertation examines the fictional representation of madness, what I have called literary maniag...
French Caribbean along with other Third World intellectuals have examined from different perspective...