Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 256
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7425-2282-4 • Hardback • June 2003 • $159.00 • (£123.00)
978-0-7425-2283-1 • Paperback • June 2003 • $62.00 • (£48.00) - Currently out of stock. Copies will arrive soon.
J. P. Little, one of the world's most respected scholars of Simone Weil, is the author of Simone Weil: Waiting on Truth and numerous articles and conference presentations on Weil's life and work. She is lecturer in French (emerita) at St. Patrick's College, Dublin.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 3 Colonization
Chapter 4 Letter to the Indochinese
Chapter 5 Morocco, or A Lesson in Theft
Chapter 6 A Little History Concerning Morocco
Chapter 7 Blood is Flowing in Tunisia
Chapter 8 Who Is Guilty of Anti-French Plots?
Chapter 9 "These Throbbing Limbs of the Fatherland…"
Chapter 10 Draft: A Protest
Chapter 11 Reflections on Bouché's Lecture
Chapter 12 Fragment: About the Colonial Regime
Chapter 13 New Facts about the Colonial Problem in the French Empire
Chapter 14 Fragment: After Munich
Chapter 15 Letter to Jean Giraudoux
Chapter 16 Letter to Dermenghem
Chapter 17 About the Problems in the French Empire
Chapter 18 Treatment of Negro War-Prisoners from the French Army
Chapter 19 The Colonial Question and the Destiny of the French People
Chapter 20 [Extracts from L'Enracinement]
Part 21 Appendix A:Louis Roubaud. Viet Nam: the Indochinese tragedy
Chapter 22 Goodnight N'Guyen!
Chapter 23 Yen Bay Vespers
Chapter 24 Fifteen hundred silent men
Chapter 25 On the sky road
Chapter 26 Wampoa school
Chapter 27 "Limpid River"
Chapter 28 The "Great Teacher"
Chapter 29 "Right and Virtue"
Chapter 30 Viet-Nam! Viet-Nam! Viet-Nam! (Cablegram of the execution)
Chapter 31 Min Chen… The life of the people
Chapter 32 More on the life of the people
Chapter 33 Indirect taxes, salt tax, alcohol, opium
Part 34 AppendixB:Albert Londres. Land of Ebony
Chapter 35 Loggers
Chapter 36 The drama of the Congo-Océan
Chapter 37 A few reflections after the journey
Part 38 Appendix C:Felicien Challaye. Memories of colonization
Chapter 39 In French Indochina: first contact
Chapter 40 In the French Congo
Chapter 41 In the French Congo: the situation of the natives
Chapter 42 In French Indochina: the situation of the Annamites
Chapter 43 Conclusion
Part 44 Appendix D:Emile Dermenghem, The North-African Crisis
Part 45 Brief chronology
Part 46 Bibliography
For anyone who wants to reflect on the nature and evils of colonialism and on the morality of colonising the 'other,' Weil's writings continue to provide much food for thought.
— Itinerario
It is now perhaps a commonplace to remark that the 'postcolonial turn' in arts and humanities research has had major impact on what is read and how we read. There is need however, to consider the more complex process of assessment, reassessment and reconfiguration that such an observation conceals….Pat Little's welcome edition of Simone Weil's fragmented writings on colonialism represents an invaluable-and for many perhaps unexpected-addition to these studies in colonial thought and culture….The volume includes a clear and full introduction, the critical apparatus (prefatory notes to each of the individual texts, and full endnotes) is exemplary, and four valuable appendices include excerpts from those texts by Roubard, Londres, Challaye and Dermenghem that seem to have had a major impact on Weil's thought. Simone Weil on Colonialism offers essential source material. It will allow an audience within and beyond French studies to explore the issues that emerge from Weil's engagement with the French empire.
— Charles Forsdick, Univeristy of Liverpool; International Journal Of Francophone Studies
This excellent collection shows the breadth of Simone Weil's anticolonial writings. . . . Appendixes, chronologies, and a select bibliography enhance a collection that contributes to understanding elements of French anticolonialism in the 1930s. Highly recommended.
— Choice Reviews