Patrick Chamoiseau's Un Dimanche au cachot (2007) and Gisèle Pineau's Folie, aller simple (2010) refer to the authors’ professions (respectively social worker and nurse) to explore the tensions besetting Caribbean territories that belong integrally to the French Republic, yet are culturally distinct from the Hexagon. While both writers use a version of ‘staged marginality’ to raise questions about the ‘imagined community’ of the Republic, each adopts a different political approach and writing strategy. Chamoiseau appears still to struggle with binary colonial anxieties in relation to France, despite his professed immersion in Glissant's transcending ‘Tout-Monde’; Pineau presents a less theorized, more integrative ‘transcultural’ Frenchness ...
Nous analysons ici les discours identitaires d’écrivains des Antilles françaises, principalement Aim...
Aimé Césaire (1913-2008) and Frantz Fanon (1925-1961) devoted their work to the radical criticism ...
The linguistic complexity of the Caribbean context forces any literary author to choose a language (...
This bachelor's thesis deals with the analysis of sociopolitical phenomena that are a consequence of...
Beyond the resistance – French West Indian’s literature facing the colonial past and globalization O...
Beyond the resistance – French West Indian’s literature facing the colonial past and globalization O...
Martinican writer and anticolonial voice Frantz Fanon wrote in Peau noire, masques blancs that langu...
La thèse se donne comme objectif d'appliquer les thèmes et les théories développés par la pensée cri...
Many regions of the world have known colonization and felt its repercussions. Slavery, indentured se...
Dans le cadre du colloque consacré à la pensée postcoloniale, Jean-Pierre SAINTON (professeur d’hist...
La thèse se donne comme objectif d’appliquer les thèmes et les théories développés par la pensée cri...
In the Caribbean, national independence traditionally meant formal de-colonization. However, the Fre...
In 1946, following the Second World War, France initiated a series of constitutional reforms designe...
This paper proposes Guadeloupean writer Gisèle Pineau’s 1995 novel L’Espérance-macadam as a case-stu...
Je traduis, donc je suis: l’impossible entre-deux des fictions créolitaires\ud \ud The present thesi...
Nous analysons ici les discours identitaires d’écrivains des Antilles françaises, principalement Aim...
Aimé Césaire (1913-2008) and Frantz Fanon (1925-1961) devoted their work to the radical criticism ...
The linguistic complexity of the Caribbean context forces any literary author to choose a language (...
This bachelor's thesis deals with the analysis of sociopolitical phenomena that are a consequence of...
Beyond the resistance – French West Indian’s literature facing the colonial past and globalization O...
Beyond the resistance – French West Indian’s literature facing the colonial past and globalization O...
Martinican writer and anticolonial voice Frantz Fanon wrote in Peau noire, masques blancs that langu...
La thèse se donne comme objectif d'appliquer les thèmes et les théories développés par la pensée cri...
Many regions of the world have known colonization and felt its repercussions. Slavery, indentured se...
Dans le cadre du colloque consacré à la pensée postcoloniale, Jean-Pierre SAINTON (professeur d’hist...
La thèse se donne comme objectif d’appliquer les thèmes et les théories développés par la pensée cri...
In the Caribbean, national independence traditionally meant formal de-colonization. However, the Fre...
In 1946, following the Second World War, France initiated a series of constitutional reforms designe...
This paper proposes Guadeloupean writer Gisèle Pineau’s 1995 novel L’Espérance-macadam as a case-stu...
Je traduis, donc je suis: l’impossible entre-deux des fictions créolitaires\ud \ud The present thesi...
Nous analysons ici les discours identitaires d’écrivains des Antilles françaises, principalement Aim...
Aimé Césaire (1913-2008) and Frantz Fanon (1925-1961) devoted their work to the radical criticism ...
The linguistic complexity of the Caribbean context forces any literary author to choose a language (...