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  • Nation-Building, Propaganda, and Literature in Francophone Africaby Dominic Thomas

    Indiana University Press 2002; US$ 18.35

    What characterizes the relationship between literature and the state? Should literature serve the needs of the state by constructing national consciousness, espousing state propaganda, and molding good citizens? Or should it be dedicated to a different kind of creative social endeavor? In this important book about literature and the politics of nation-building, Dominic Thomas assesses the contributions of Francophone African writers whose works have played a key role in the recent transition to democracy in the Congo. Exploring the works of Sony Labou Tansi, Henri Lopes, and Emmanuel Dongala, among others, Thomas highlights writers ... more...

  • Sharing as Custom Providesby Raylene Ramsay; Deborah Walker

    Pandanus Books 2005; US$ 24.00

    Translated collection of poems by New Caledonia writer Déwé Gorodé. more...

  • Madah-Sartreby Alek Baylee Toumi

    University of Nebraska Press 2007; US$ 13.95

    ?Hell is other people,? Jean-Paul Sartre famously wrote in No Exit . The fantastic tragicomedy Madah-Sartre brings him back from the dead to confront the strange and awful truth of that statement. As the story begins, Sartre and his consort in intellect and love, Simone de Beauvoir, are on their way to the funeral of Tahar Djaout, an Algerian poet and journalist slain in 1993. more...

  • Silence Is Deathby Julija Sukys

    University of Nebraska Press 2007; US$ 26.95

    On May 26, 1993, the Algerian novelist and poet Tahar Djaout was gunned down in an attack attributed to Islamist extremists. An outspoken critic of the extremism roiling his nation, Djaout, in his death, became a powerful symbol for the ?murder of Algerian culture,? as scores of journalists, writers, and scholars were targeted in a swelling wave of violence. more...

  • Creole Identity in the French Caribbean Novelby H. Adlai Murdoch

    UPF 2001; US$ 59.95

    ''Murdoch exploits the postmodern theoretical vocabulary to provide perceptive readings of a selection of French Caribbean novels within the framework of antillanité and créolité .''-- E. Anthony Hurley, State University of New York, Stony Brook Adlai Murdoch offers a detailed rereading of five major contemporary French Caribbean writers--Glissant, Condé, Maximin, Dracius-Pinalie, and Chamoiseau. more...

  • Transfigurations of the Maghrebby Winifred Woodhull

    University of Minnesota Press 1993; US$ 72.00

    Through readings of some of the best-known texts in Algerian literature in French, Woodhull both challenges the separation between French and Francophone literatures and cultures in the academy and explores the ways in which ?femininity? has been represented in the texts of North African and French writers since the mid-1950s. more...

  • The Cambridge Introduction to Francophone Literatureby Patrick Corcoran

    Cambridge University Press 2007; US$ 23.00

    A stimulating overview of the literature of French-speaking nations in Africa, Asia, Europe and the Americas. more...

  • The Sense of Community in French Caribbean Fictionby Celia Britton

    Liverpool University Press 2008; US$ 85.00

    This book analyses the theme of community in seven French Caribbean novels in relation to the work of the French philosopher Jean-Luc Nancy. The islands’ complex history means that community is a central and problematic issue in their literature, and underlies a range of other questions such as political agency, individual and collective subjectivity, attitudes towards the past and the future, and even literary form itself. Britton examines Jacques Roumain’s Gouverneurs de la rosée , Edouard Glissant’s Le Quatrième Siècle , Simone Schwarz-Bart’s Pluie et vent sur Télumée Miracle , Vincent Placoly’s L’eau-de-mort guildive , Patrick Chamoiseau’s Texaco , Daniel Maximin’s L’Ile... more...

  • Assia Djebarby Jane Hiddleston

    Liverpool University Press 2006; US$ 70.00

    For more than fifty years, Assia Djebar, Silver Chair of French at New York University and winner of the Neustadt Prize for Contribution to World Literature, has used the tools of poetry, fiction, drama and film to vividly portray the world of Muslim women in all its complexity. In the process, she has become one of the most important figures in North African literature. In Assia Djebar , Jane Hiddleston traces Djebar’s development as a writer against the backdrop of North Africa’s tumultuous history. Whereas Djebar’s early writings were largely an attempt to delineate clearly the experience of being a woman, an intellectual, and an Algerian embedded in that often violent history, she has in her more recent work evinced a growing... more...

  • Autobiography and Independenceby Debra Kelly

    Liverpool University Press 2005; US$ 85.00

    This book offers an in-depth study of the autobiographical writings of four twentieth-century writers from North Africa, Assia Djebar, Mouloud Feraoun, Abdelkébir Khatibi and Albert Memmi, as they explore issues of language, identity and the individual’s relationship to history. The book places these writers in a clearly defined theoretical context, introducing and contextualising each of the four through the application of postcolonial studies and literary theory on autobiography linked to close textual reading of their works. Avoiding both psychoanalytical theory and approaches concerned primarily with the writer’s ‘testimony value’, Kelly concentrates instead on the poetic and literary qualities of each author’s... more...