The island trope is a recurring theme in colonial travel literature but how do contemporary authors of the French-speaking world conceptualize the island in the 20th and 21st century? My project examines the complexity of the notion of islandedness in the works of three contemporary authors of Francophone islands outside the French Caribbean: Corsican author Marie Ferranti, Réunionese author Jean-François Samlong, and Tahitian author Chantal Spitz. Drawing on different discourses of postmodernity including intertextuality, supermodernity, the hyperreal, the time-image, and violence, I argue that the island becomes an important site from which ethnography, the crisis of time and meaning, and techniques of resistance are negotiated and cons...
Of all the literary and cultural traditions in the Caribbean, none has produced a body of work as ri...
This article examines the representation of Corsican identity in the French-language poetry of Corsi...
Fictional islands are distinctive, significant literary geographies. This chapter explores these sit...
The island trope is a recurring theme in colonial travel literature but how do contemporary authors ...
Due to the historical and geographical impact of colonialism, the field of Island Studies and schola...
From Bernadin de Saint-Pierre\u27s pastoral idylls to postcolonial euphorias over pluralist Creole w...
From Bernadin de Saint-Pierre\u27s pastoral idylls to postcolonial euphorias over pluralist Creole w...
peer-reviewedSince 1979 there has been a marked increase in literary production from Mauritius, prim...
Exploring the links among accelerating patterns of migration, homogenizing forces of globalization, ...
My aim is to present a reading of islands as places and resemblances, including an understanding of ...
Ex oriente lux? From the Southern Tropics in any case, since certain myths from former times, forgot...
In this essay written in 2004, Françoise Vergès and Carpanin Marimoutou explore the ways in which pr...
African-American writer John Edgar Wideman chose the French Caribbean island of Martinique as settin...
International audienceThe African American writer John Edgar Wideman published in 2003 a travel memo...
Many regions of the world have known colonization and felt its repercussions. Slavery, indentured se...
Of all the literary and cultural traditions in the Caribbean, none has produced a body of work as ri...
This article examines the representation of Corsican identity in the French-language poetry of Corsi...
Fictional islands are distinctive, significant literary geographies. This chapter explores these sit...
The island trope is a recurring theme in colonial travel literature but how do contemporary authors ...
Due to the historical and geographical impact of colonialism, the field of Island Studies and schola...
From Bernadin de Saint-Pierre\u27s pastoral idylls to postcolonial euphorias over pluralist Creole w...
From Bernadin de Saint-Pierre\u27s pastoral idylls to postcolonial euphorias over pluralist Creole w...
peer-reviewedSince 1979 there has been a marked increase in literary production from Mauritius, prim...
Exploring the links among accelerating patterns of migration, homogenizing forces of globalization, ...
My aim is to present a reading of islands as places and resemblances, including an understanding of ...
Ex oriente lux? From the Southern Tropics in any case, since certain myths from former times, forgot...
In this essay written in 2004, Françoise Vergès and Carpanin Marimoutou explore the ways in which pr...
African-American writer John Edgar Wideman chose the French Caribbean island of Martinique as settin...
International audienceThe African American writer John Edgar Wideman published in 2003 a travel memo...
Many regions of the world have known colonization and felt its repercussions. Slavery, indentured se...
Of all the literary and cultural traditions in the Caribbean, none has produced a body of work as ri...
This article examines the representation of Corsican identity in the French-language poetry of Corsi...
Fictional islands are distinctive, significant literary geographies. This chapter explores these sit...