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Historicizing Colonial Nostalgia

Autor Patricia M.E. Lorcin
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 iul 2019
This illuminating study of European women's narratives in colonial Algeria and Kenya argues that nostalgia was not a post-colonial phenomenon but was embedded in the colonial period. Patricia M. E. Lorcin explores the distinction between imperial nostalgia, associated with the loss of power that results from the loss of empire, and colonial nostalgia, associated with loss of socio-cultural standing in other words, loss of a certain way of life. This distinction helps to make women's discursive role an important factor in the creation of colonial nostalgia, due to their significant contribution to the establishment of a European colonial environment."
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781137414786
ISBN-10: 1137414782
Pagini: 330
Ilustrații: 7 b&w photos
Editura: Palgrave MacMillan
Locul publicării:Basingstoke, United Kingdom

Cuprins

PART I: 1900-1930. COLONIAL WOMEN AND THEIR IMAGINED SELVES 
1. Women and their Colonial Worlds 
2. Nostalgia Personified: Isabelle Eberhardt and Karen Blixen 
PART II: 1920-1940. POLITICAL REALITIES AND FICTIONAL REPRESENTATIONS 
3. Reality Expressed; Reality Imagined: Colonial Women in Twenties Algeria and Kenya 
4. Writing and Living the Exotic [The Twenties] 
5. Women's Fictions of Colonial Realism [The Thirties]
PART III: IMPERIAL DECLINE AND THE REFORMULATION OF NOSTALGIA 
6. Nationalist Anger; Colonial Illusions: Women's responses to Decolonization
7. Happy Families, Red Strangers and 'A Vanishing Africa': Nostalgia Comes Full Circle

Recenzii

"This book builds on recent moves in the historical discipline towards interdisciplinary, transnational history, providing a unique, comparative account of colonial nostalgia throughout the twentieth century and into the first decade of the twenty-first century ... Lorcin masterfully intertwines historical narrative with literary analysis." - French History

"In this masterful study, Patricia M. E. Lorcin systematically compares two different places, cultures, and empires over an extended period of time - French Algeria and British Kenya - within the overarching framework of colonial nostalgia and women's writings. Colonial women's literary output serves as an entry point for understanding critical, but shifting, relationships: individual and collective sensibilities, gendered narratives, and self-formation or identity. Lorcin's triangulation between competing understandings of modernity, various literary and experienced forms of nostalgia, and women's roles in and experiences of settler colonialism represents a real tour de force." - Julia Clancy-Smith, professor of History, University of Arizona, USA

"This is a fascinating and thoughtful book. Patricia M. E. Lorcin's study of women writers in the colonies of French Algeria and British Kenya is original and, by turns, illuminating and disquieting. Well-conceived and imaginatively constructed, the book is elegantly written and forensically clear. It will be of huge interest to a general readership as well as to specialist scholars of colonial and imperial history, women's history, and historical memory. Lorcin's study offers a welcome corrective, its value evident in the new perspectives it reveals." - Martin Thomas, professor of History, University of Exeter, UK


Notă biografică

Patricia Lorcin is Professor of History at the University of Minnesota, USA. She is the author of Imperial Identities: Stereotyping, Prejudice and Race in Colonial Algeria (1995), editor of Algeria and France 1800-2000: Identity, Memory, and Nostalgia (2006), and co-editor of several collections of essays including France and its Spaces of War: Experience, Memory, Image (2009).

Caracteristici

There are few comparative studies in the literature on this subject, while there is a plethora of work on women writers within a single colony
Lorcin avoids reductive explanations, examines the intersection of race, ethnicity, gender, colonialism, and modernity
Lorcin provides a complex, not unsympathetic look at these writers, without ignoring the underlying racism or trauma of colonialism and Neurology and Modernity, ed. Salisbury and Shail (Palgrave, 2009)

Descriere

Comparative study of the writings and strategies of European women in two colonies, French Algeria and British Kenya, during the twentieth century. Its central theme is women's discursive contribution to the construction of colonial nostalgia.