Lexington Books
Pages: 448
Trim: 7 x 10½
978-0-7391-0567-2 • Hardback • April 2003 • $157.00 • (£121.00)
Kamal Salhi is Director of the Centre for Francophone Studies in the Department of French at the University of Leeds. He is the editor of French In and Out of France: Language Policies, Intercultural Antagonisms, and Dialogue (2002) and the editor or author of several other works in Francophone studies. He is the founder and editor of the International Journal of Francophone Studies.
Chapter 1 The Francophone World Moves into the Twenty-first Century
Part 2 North Africa and the Middle East
Chapter 3 Colonial Culture as Francophone? The Case of Late Nineteenth-Century Algeria
Chapter 4 Closing and Opening of the Domestic Space in Ombre Sultane by Assia Djebar
Chapter 5 The Interruptive Dynamics of History and Autobiography in L'Amour, la fantasie
Chapter 6 Francophone Literature of the Middle East by Women: Breaking the Walls of Silence
Part 7 Sub-Saharan Africa
Chapter 8 The Negotiation of Identity in the Francophone African Novel
Chapter 9 The Myth of the Garden of Eden and the Symbolism of the Baobab Tree in the Works of Ken Bugul and Aminata Sow Fall
Chapter 10 Revisiting the "Roman de la Desillusion": A Semiotic and Cultural Reading of Ousmane Sembène's Xala
Chapter 11 Challenging Colonization of Space: Exteriors and Interiors in the Films of Ousmane Sembène and Suleymane Cissé
Chapter 12 The Other I: Questions of Identity in Une Vie de boy
Part 13 The Caribbean
Chapter 14 Landscaping Identity in Contemporary Caribbean Literature
Chapter 15 Breaking the Metronome: Community and Song in the Works of Maryse Condé's Moi, Tituba sorcière . . . Noire de Salem
Chapter 16 Literature in Guiana: The D'Chimbo Narratives
Chapter 17 Guadeloupean Literature: Multiple Versions of Créolité
Chapter 18 History and Cultural Identity in Haitian Writings
Part 19 North America
Chapter 20 The Quebec Novel
Chapter 21 Quebecois Drama: Bordering on Intimacy
Chapter 22 Reflections on the Figures of a Nation in Les anciens canadiens by Philipe Aubert de Gaspé, père
Chapter 23 Antonine Maillet's Rewriting of Acadian History
Chapter 24 "Raconte-moi Acadie": The Competing Voices of Acadia in Jacque Savoie's Novel Raconte-moi Massabielle and His Film Massabielle
Part 25 Europe
Chapter 26 Communication, Language, and Silence in Suisse Romande
Chapter 27 Paradox of Linguistic Specificity and Dependence in the Regionalist Novels by Arthur Masson
Chapter 28 Linguistics Profit, Loss, and Betrayal in Paris-Athènes
Chapter 29 On Earthquakes and Cultural Sedimentation: The Origins of Post-Colonial Shock Waves in Azouz Begag's Zenzela
Part 30 The Indian Ocean and Southeast Asia
Chapter 31 How Appropriate is the Term "Post-Colonial to the Cultural Production of Réunion?
Chapter 32 The Poetics of Mixed Marriage in Le Clézio's La Quarantaine
Chapter 33 A Vietnamese Voice in the Dark: Three Stages in the Corpus of Linda Lê
Part 34 The Pacific Ocean
Chapter 35 New Caledonia: An Emerging Literature as Social Project
Chapter 36 Appendix A: Summaries of Selected Creative and Critical Works
Chapter 37 Appendix B: Guide to Selected Terms and Figures
Professor Salhi offers a collection of work on Francophone issues that is monumental in breadth and scope. The work sets the tone for Francophone Studies in the twenty-first century by offering new insights into the history and the concepts of space and geopolitics, as they relate to notions of cultural identity, language, alienation, and ideologies of Otherness throughout the Francophone world.
— Valérie Orlando, Illinois Wesleyan University
...Francophone Post-Colonial Cultures is an excellent resource for faculty or graduate students new to the discipline as well as for specialists. Instructors preparing a coruse on francophone literatures and cultures will find a wealth of material in its panoramic view.
— L'esprit Createur
This collection of essays offers a current but lasting contribution to the field of francophone studies. . . university libraries should consider the hardback version essential for their collections.
— International Journal Of Francophone Studies
Recommendeddddd
— Choice Reviews
Francophone Post-Colonial Cultures is focused and accessible to advanced students and their teachers who wish to go beyond the French literary canon and a valuable reference to any Africanist. The essays display historical depth and theoretical finesse, thus providing a starting point for the eamination of the cultural differences and commonalities that comprise the Francophone world today. In a word, this volume has the ability to trigger a dialogue between Francophone and Anglophone scholars of postcolonialism and to further Africanists understanding of Postcolonial Africa and the diaspora.
— H-Net: Humanities and Social Science Reviews Online
We teachers and scholars in "Francophonie" need books like this one that re-examine the terms, the history, and the cultures of the French-speaking world. This volume promises to be not only international, but transnational in its reach and purpose. I see this book as a great resource for the classroom.
— Marjorie Salvodon, Suffolk University
Recommended
— Choice Reviews
Kamal Salhi's timely collection of essays, which is part of an excellent new series, arrives at a moment when debates on the relationship between Francophone Studies and postcolonial theory are increasingly preoccupying scholars in this area.
— Modern Language Review
-Summaries of selected creative and critical works
-Guide to selected terms and figures
-Original French-language citations