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Forms of Protest: Studies in African Literature,

Autor Phyllis Taoua, Taoua
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 30 sep 2002

European domination and transformation of colonized societies in Africa and the Caribbean has inspired a great deal of writing. Phyllis Taoua propounds a revisionist synthesis of the French colonial project, illustrating how writers from Africa, the Caribbean, and France developed avant-garde programs in dialog with one another. This provocative reassessment of canonical works by Aime Cesaire, Mongo Beti, Sony Labou, and others, deliberately challenges models of cultural freedom predicated on outmoded notions of cultural purity. A focus on avant-gardes and anti-colonialism highlights the antagonism inherent in colonial society, illustrating modes of cross-cultural innovation developed as forms of protest. What emerges is an interpretive model of dynamic interaction in which actors on both sides of the colonial divide participated and were transformed as a result.

Written in clear, jargon-free prose that both students and specialists will appreciate, this is the first book in the Studies in African Literature series to place African literature in firm dialog with France and the Caribbean, making it especially valuable to anyone interested in African, Caribbean, and other post-colonial literatures, as well as 20th-century French literature.

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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780325070902
ISBN-10: 0325070903
Pagini: 304
Dimensiuni: 154 x 242 x 27 mm
Greutate: 0.6 kg
Editura: Heinemann Educational Books
Seria Studies in African Literature,


Descriere

European domination and transformation of colonized societies in Africa and the Caribbean has inspired a great deal of writing. Phyllis Taoua propounds a revisionist synthesis of the French colonial project, illustrating how writers from Africa, the Caribbean, and France developed avant-garde programs in dialog with one another. This provocative reassessment of canonical works by Aime Cesaire, Mongo Beti, Sony Labou, and others, deliberately challenges models of cultural freedom predicated on outmoded notions of cultural purity. A focus on avant-gardes and anti-colonialism highlights the antagonism inherent in colonial society, illustrating modes of cross-cultural innovation developed as forms of protest. What emerges is an interpretive model of dynamic interaction in which actors on both sides of the colonial divide participated and were transformed as a result.
Written in clear, jargon-free prose that both students and specialists will appreciate, this is the first book in the Studies in African Literature series to place African literature in firm dialog with France and the Caribbean, making it especially valuable to anyone interested in African, Caribbean, and other post-colonial literatures, as well as 20th-century French literature.

Cuprins

Introduction: Against the Grain
The InterwarYears
Vanguard Primitivism and the Politics of Surrealist Revolution
The Emergence of Anti-Colonialism from the Crucible of Empire
The Postwar Years
French Existentialism and the Ethics of Difference
Anti-Colonialism Redefined
Decolonization and After
France's Imperial Wounds
Africa's Neo-Colonial Predicament
Conclusion
Selected Bibliography
Index