Transnational French Studies: Postcolonialism and Litterature-monde
Online ISBN:
9781846316265
Print ISBN:
9781846314834
Publisher:
Liverpool University Press
Book
Transnational French Studies: Postcolonialism and Litterature-monde
Published online:
20 June 2013
Published in print:
29 November 2010
Online ISBN:
9781846316265
Print ISBN:
9781846314834
Publisher:
Liverpool University Press
Cite
Hargreaves, Alec G., Charles Forsdick, and David Murphy (eds), Transnational French Studies: Postcolonialism and Litterature-monde (Liverpool , 2010; online edn, Liverpool Scholarship Online, 20 June 2013), https://doi.org/10.5949/UPO9781846316265, accessed 18 Apr. 2025.
Abstract
In 2007 Le Monde published a ‘Manifesto for a World Literature’. Signed by a multinational group of authors — many from former French colonies — the manifesto has drawn mixed reactions. Praised by some for breaking down the hierarchical division between French and Francophone literature, it has been criticised by others for reestablishing that division through the exoticism of the Francophone body of work. This book addresses this debate and assesses the wider question of the evolving status of French, Francophone, and postcolonial studies amid the challenges of globalisation.
Subject
Literary Studies (European)
Contents
-
Front Matter
- Introduction: What Does Littérature-monde Mean for French, Francophone and Postcolonial Studies?
-
From World Literature to Littérature-monde: Genre, History and the Globalization of Literature
-
Francophone World Literature (Littérature-monde), Cosmopolitanism and Decadence: ‘Citizen of the World’ without the Citizen?
-
From Weltliteratur to World Literature to Littérature-monde: The History of a Controversial Concept
-
Littérature-monde in the Marketplace of Ideas: A Theoretical Discussion
-
The Postcolonial Manifesto: Partisanship, Criticism and the Performance of Change
-
Francophone World Literature (Littérature-monde), Cosmopolitanism and Decadence: ‘Citizen of the World’ without the Citizen?
-
Postcolonialism, Politics and the ‘Becoming-Transnational’ of French Studies
-
‘On the Abolition of the French Department’? Exploring the Disciplinary Contexts of Littérature-monde
-
Francophonie: Trash or Recycle?
- (Not) Razing the Walls: Glissant, Trouillot and the Post-Politics of World ‘Literature’
-
The ‘Marie Ndiaye Affair’ or the Coming of a Postcolonial Evoluée
Dominic Thomas
-
(R)evolutions
-
Littérature-monde and Old/New Humanism
Jane Hiddleston
-
‘On the Abolition of the French Department’? Exploring the Disciplinary Contexts of Littérature-monde
-
Mapping Littérature-monde
-
Littérature-monde, or Redefining Exotic Literature?
-
From Littérature voyageuse to Littérature-monde via Migrant Literatures: Towards an Ethics and Poetics of Littérature-monde through French-Australian Literature
Jacqueline Dutton
- Littérature-monde and the Space of Translation, or, Where is Littérature-monde?
-
Littérature-monde or Littérature océanienne? Internationalism versus Regionalism in Francophone Pacific Writing
Michelle Keown
-
The World and the Mirror in Two Twenty-First-Century Manifestos: ‘Pour une “littérature-monde” en français' and ‘Qui fait la France?’
-
The Post-Genocidal African Subject: Patrice Nganang, Achille Mbembe and the Worldliness of Contemporary African Literature in French
Michael Syrotinski
- Afterword: The ‘World’ in World Literature
-
Littérature-monde, or Redefining Exotic Literature?
-
End Matter
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