Lexington Books
Pages: 188
Trim: 6¾ x 9½
978-0-7391-1472-8 • Hardback • March 2006 • $124.00 • (£95.00)
978-0-7391-1473-5 • Paperback • September 2006 • $52.99 • (£41.00)
978-0-7391-5984-2 • eBook • March 2006 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
Dr. Shireen K. Lewis is Executive Director of EduSeed, a nonprofit organization in Washington, D.C., and the Founder of EduSeed's SisterMentors program. Her scholarship and university teaching is in Francophone West African and Caribbean Literature.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Légitime Défense: A Precursor to Modern Black Francophone Literature
Chapter 3 What Was Négritude?
Chapter 4 Gendering Négritude: Paulette Nardal's Contribution to the Birth of Modern Francophone Literature
Chapter 5 Rerooting the Uprooted: Edouard Glissant's Antillanité and Beyond
Chapter 6 The Créolité Movement: Reconfiguring Identity in the Caribbean in the Late Twentieth Century
Not everyone who's talking about the space of contemporary black consciousness knows how it evolved. Shireen K. Lewis does. Her analysis of how Black Francophone Caribbean intellectuals and writers made the twentieth-century transition from advocating negritude to trumpeting creolite illuminates our current debates about cultural 'authenticity' and multicultural hybridity.
— George Elliott Clarke, University of Toronto
Race, Culture, and Identity crosses a crucial bridge from Africa to the Caribbean. The reader travels from postcolonial Afrocentrism to a cross-cultural global perspective. Lewis was the first to illuminate the important position of Paulette Nardal, a Martinican feminist active in the Negritude movement. This dramatic discovery, which reveals black women's full contribution to Francophone culture, exposes a new world in French literature.
— Linda Orr, Duke University
A highly readable book that allows the reader to play a role in discovery of another time and place. By demystifying her theme, she presents ideas that everyone can understand about what lies beneath the complex world that shapes the destinies of so many. How those ideas are in turn reflected in contemporary culture is, of course, where readers can begin to discover for themselves.
— Hispanic Outlook
Race, Culture, and Identity will be useful to scholars, teachers and students who seek to understand the history of black modernity and post-modernity, and the role of some prominent Francophone Antillean and African writers.
— The French Review, February 2008
An eloquently written and path-breaking analysis of black identities in the Francophone world with significant relevance for contemporary discussions of globalism and the Black diaspora.
— Katya Gibel Azoulay, Grinnell College