Lexington Books
Pages: 222
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-1-4985-4229-6 • Hardback • December 2017 • $117.00 • (£90.00)
978-1-4985-4230-2 • eBook • December 2017 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
Julia L. Frengs is assistant professor of French at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Introduction: Writing the Body in Oceania
Chapter 1: The Instigation and the Perpetuation of the Mythical Oceanian Body
Chapter 2: Sexual Violence, Trauma, and the Damaged Oceanian Body
Chapter 3: Ecological Bodies: An Ecocritical Lens
Chapter 4: Writing Institutionalized Bodies: Breaking out of Confinement
Chapter 5: To Speak or not to Speak: Writing the Silent Body
Conclusion: Oceanian Literature, or The New Tattoo
Julia Frengs’s first monograph goes beyond being just a sum of its respective parts; it is an impressively extensive study of Francophone women’s writing from French Polynesia and New Caledonia, a region that has not received enough attention in academic studies. . . Frengs masterfully analyzes the metaphoric and metonymic connection between the centrality of the female body and the land in this timely and scholarly manuscript. . . . Frengs offers a solid scholarly text that employs feminist, ecocritical, and literary theory and contains a wealth of evidence. It brings a number of valuable additions to the field, representing an exceptionally important scholarly source and essential reading for scholars of Francophone Women’s Literature from French Polynesia and New Caledonia.
— Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature
Corporeal Archipelagos is a profoundly significant and beautifully conceived study of the French-language work of four women from French Polynesia and New Caledonia that combines a thorough knowledge of this literature with a strong theoretical approach. Julia Frengs’s expertise on Oceanian authors Déwé Gorodé, Claudine Jacques, Ari’irau, and Chantal Spitz comes through in an unprecedented examination of the centrality of the body to questions with ecological, historical, national, political, sexual, and social import in an oft-overlooked region of Francophone women’s writing.
— Alison Rice, University of Notre Dame
Anyone interested in Pacific Francophone literature should have this book, as it is a very complete work about the question of the Oceanian body in French speaking literature.
— Titaua Porcher-Wiart, Université de la Polynésie Française