Lexington Books
Pages: 188
Trim: 6½ x 9⅜
978-0-7391-2137-5 • Hardback • December 2007 • $120.00 • (£92.00)
Srilata Ravi< is senior lecturer of European Languages and Studies at the University of Western Australia.
Chapter 1 1. Coloring the Rainbow—An Introduction
Part 2 Part I
Chapter 3 2. Coolie Heroism: Nationalism, Postnationalism, and the Romance of Indenture Immigration
Chapter 4 3. Walking on Fire: Religion, Gender, and Identity in Ananda Devi's Le voile de Draupadi
Part 5 Part II
Chapter 6 4. Ambivalently Abnormal: Métis as Racial Grotesque in Loys Masson's L'étoile et la clef and Carl de Souza'sLe sang de l'Anglais
Chapter 7 5. Colors of Shame: Métissage and Desire in Marie-Thérèse Humbert's A l'autre bout de moi
Part 8 Part III
Chapter 9 6. Remembering to Forget: War and Domesticity in Marcelle Lagesse's Le vingt floréal du matin
Chapter 10 7. Drifting Pauls and Wandering Virginies: French Creole Identities in Jean-Marie Le Clézio's La quarantaine
Part 11 Postface
Chapter 12 8. Trodden Rainbow: Towards an Ethics of Reading Violence in Ananda Devi's Moi, l'interdite
Her study, a literary ethno-topography, investigates the complex relations between ethnicity, identity, and nation on the island.
— Maria G. Traub, Neumann College (PA); The French Review, October 2009
This useful book explores the relations between ethnicity, identity and nation in the literary texts which have emerged in the French language recent times from Mauritius. These texts show how Mauritian writers using French have emerged from the exoticizing shadow cast by early French representations of the island to embrace and engage with the modern realities of this complex, multi-layered society. This is a well-researched and timely account of a place in which diasporic identity is the universal condition. It speaks to issues which are becoming central to all studies of the postcolony and to the situation of the erstwhile metropoles.
— Gareth Griffiths, University of Western Australia