Engaging, incisive, and carefully argued, Ethnic Minority Women’s Writing in France offers an important overview of France’s postcolonial legacy, as it aims to expose the country’s multicultural mirage inherently tied to its patriarchal values. By focusing on the gendered publishing practices of the French 1998-2005 era—from the euphoric Black-Blanc-Beur years of the post-1998 French soccer World Cup win to the 2005 French banlieue riots exposing a less glorious side of French history—Claire Mouflard offers a timely contribution to our current racial and gender reckoning.
— Bénédicte Boisseron, Professor of Afroamerican and African Studies at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Ethnic Minority Women’s Writing in France: Publishing Practices and Identity Formation (1998-2005) blends an ambitious range of theoretical approaches with compelling archival research, and offers a timely intervention in the notion of the “Bleu-Blanc-Beur” utopia years spanning France’s 1998 World Cup victory to the 2005 banlieue riots. With its sharp focus on autobiographical and auto-fictional narratives by Samira Bellil, Nina Bouraoui, Nora Hamdi, Calixthe Beyala, Bessora, Fatou Diome, Anna Moï and Linda Lê, Ethnic Minority Women’s Writing in France brings valuable new insight into the ways literary and political institutions construct neocolonial stereotypes of ethnic women minorities, and the strategies these writers use to contest them.
— Lisa Connell, University of West Georgia
Claire Mouflard’s book successfully connects key events in recent French history with literary practices to shed light on the increasing importance of post-migratory cultures in France today. By focusing on a specific period (from the 1998 World Cup victory to the riots of 2005), she shows in detail how French culture has been redefined by minorities from the country’s former colonies. A rich and perceptive book for anybody interested in postcolonial studies and gender in contemporary France.
— Stève Puig, St. John's University