Lexington Books
Pages: 212
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-0-7391-6821-9 • Hardback • November 2013 • $120.00 • (£92.00)
978-1-4985-2125-3 • Paperback • August 2015 • $57.99 • (£45.00)
978-0-7391-6822-6 • eBook • November 2013 • $55.00 • (£42.00)
Claudia Esposito is assistant professor of French at the University of Massachusetts, Boston.
Her research interests focus on translation, migration, urban geographies and transcultural crossings in Maghrebi and French literature and film. Her articles on Albert Memmi, Tahar Ben Jelloun and Abdellatif Kechiche have appeared in several journals including Studies in French Cinema, Expressions Maghrébines, Journal of Postcolonial Writing and The French Review.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Part I: Humanism and History
Chapter 1: A Humanism of the Sun
Chapter 2: Of Chronological Others and Alternative Histories
Part II: Deconstructing Binaries
Chapter 3: On Gender
Chapter 4: Shifting Geographies
Part III: Crossing the Straits and Moving the Center
Chapter 5: (E)migration, Imagination And Dissonance
Chapter 6: Addio Farança: Into the 21st Century
Conclusion: Reflections on a Future
Bibliography
About the Author
The Narrative Mediterranean is one of a number of critical studies following the publication of Pour une littérature monde (2007), a manifesto examining the decentering of France and of the French language in works written by so-called Francophone authors. Esposito focuses on authors associated with the Maghreb, the former French colonies in North Africa, and the degree to which their works promote a polysemic, transgressive Mediterranean as an alternative to ahegemonic and monolithic France. The study opens with the treatment of historical concerns as in the works of Albert Camus, Fawzi Mellah, and Amin Maalouf before moving on to Nina Bouraoui and Tahar Ben Jelloun, whose works are analyzed as destabilizing traditional binaries of male and female, north and south, France and the Maghreb. The third section considers Mahi Binebine, Abdelmalek Smari, Mohsen Melliti, and Amara Lakhous, along with Ben Jelloun, as authors of Maghrebi origin who literally write outside of France and, with works published in Italian, outside of the French language. Esposito raises a number of interesting questions about the continued validity of the concept of "national" literatures and invites comparisons between Mediterranean-ness and other transnational approaches to the study and production of literature. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.
— Choice Reviews
In a book, which in many ways itself narrates the contemporary Mediterranean, Claudia Esposito brings together a number of contemporary writers who trace their roots to the Maghreb and Mashreq and whose connections, so often drawn along the lines of nation and language, might otherwise be overlooked. . . . .Esposito challenges the reader to look beyond the notions of identity, race and language fixed within the limits of the nation state.
— Bulletin of Francophone Postcolonial Studies
Esposito’s book is a solid analysis that takes the reader to a postcolonial Maghreb beyond France’s influence. It is a unique discussion that, while giving a central place to the Mediterranean in literature, incorporates history, culture, and civilization, creating a dynamic dialogue demonstrating that any literary text is inscribed in time and space. . . .[The book is a] valuable . . . [contribution] that show[s] how literature is breaking through geographical boundaries and making a crossroad of the Mediterranean.
— Contemporary French Civilization
This thought-provoking essay belongs to a growing but still under-represented trend within (and on the margins of) postcolonial studies.With persuasive efficiency, Esposito elaborates her reflections through a tripartite critical stance. . . .Esposito’s book remains an engaging piece of scholarship of most urgent relevance.
— French Review
The beautifully focused arguments in this book propose the cultural intensities of an open and multiple Mediterranean that shatters the narrow dichotomies that discipline our views and verdicts. We are justly asked to step beyond existing boundaries, hear the dissonance and register the complexities of a world whose fluidity is irreducible to immediate domestication. Just as the familiar is rendered foreign, so the foreign acquires familiarity in the challenge and possibilities of a Mediterranean still in the making.
— Iain Chambers, author of Postcolonial Interruptions, Unauthorised Modernities
Claudia Esposito’s well-researched, beautifully written book makes a significant contribution to Mediterranean Studies as well as Francophone Studies in the Maghreb. As the title indicates, The Narrative Mediterranean: Beyond France and the Maghreb examines literary texts outside of the binary, dichotomous relationship between the former colonizing power and the postcolonial countries of North Africa. In this work, Professor Esposito presents her readers with a new perspective on Maghrebian authors situated with respect to the Mediterranean, understood as a transnational space that offers a multitude of possible points of interaction and intersection. The Narrative Mediterranean is an example of fine scholarship that is highly informative as well as deeply insightful. What is especially noteworthy is Claudia Esposito’s attention to the importance of other languages that complicate the French/Arabic dilemma when it comes to the idiom of expression in the written text. Her fascinating chapter on authors from the Maghreb who have chosen to compose literary works in Italian is innovative and important in its recognition of the plurilingualism that characterizes this region.
— Alison Rice, University of Notre Dame