Lexington Books
Pages: 146
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-4985-3872-5 • Hardback • March 2018 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
978-1-4985-3874-9 • Paperback • September 2019 • $46.99 • (£36.00)
978-1-4985-3873-2 • eBook • March 2018 • $44.50 • (£35.00)
Sage Goellner is assistant professor of French at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Introduction
Chapter 1 – The Unsettled: Eugène Fromentin’s Haunted Journeys
Chapter 2 – Subjectivity Undone: Théophile Gautier’s Algeria
Chapter 3 – Battlefields and Barbarians: Salammbô and Its Historical Contexts
Chapter 4 – Le Mal de la Kasbah: Pierre Loti in Algiers
Afterword
Sage Goellner’s book offers a new approach to literature sometimes dismissed as ‘exoticist’ or otherwise of secondary importance: the travel writing and fiction that represented North Africa to nineteenth-century French readers.— Oxford Journals
This book is recommended reading for those interested in colonial or nineteenth-century studies.
— The French Review
Attentive to the disturbing historical traces of colonial Algeria found in French Orientalist texts, Sage Goellner makes a compelling case for a re-evaluation of these nineteenth-century narratives and their testimony to the haunting violence and trauma of French colonialism. She demonstrates skillfully how these works continue to haunt our contemporary landscape and inform the memories and relations between France and Algeria. — Michael O'Riley, The Colorado College