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My Mother, My Country

Reconstructing the Female Self in Guadeloupean Women’s Writing

by Wendy Goolcharan-Kumeta (Author)
©2003 Monographs 236 Pages
Series: Modern French Identities, Volume 21

Summary

This study is an in-depth exploration of mother-daughter relationships in the texts of five Guadeloupean women writers, both celebrated and less known. The five authors whose texts are examined are Maryse Condé, Myriam Warner-Vieyra, Michèle Lacrosil, Jacqueline Manicom and Simone Schwarz-Bart. The author sets out to prove that in the realm of French Caribbean «female-centric» fiction, a disturbed or ruptured relationship with the biological mother results in the disintegration of the daughter’s psyche and self. The mother-daughter bond functions as a focus for the exploration of other significant themes, which include a quest for an identity and identity formation, intimately linked to the issue of history and origins. Difficult male-female relations and the demoralizing questions of race, class and culture differences are also explored.

Details

Pages
236
Year
2003
ISBN (Softcover)
9783906769769
Language
English
Keywords
Guadeloupe Geschichte 1960-1992 Women's writing Caribbean female fiction mother-daughter relationsship Creole female identity identity formation Französisch Frauenprosa Mutter (Motiv) Tochter (Motiv)
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., New York, Wien, 2003. 236 pp.

Biographical notes

Wendy Goolcharan-Kumeta (Author)

The Author: Wendy Goolcharan-Kumeta (1969) has a Ph.D. from the University of Cambridge, specialising in French Caribbean women’s literature with readings of contemporary feminist and psychoanalytic theory. She has an M.A. in French Studies from Queen’s University in Canada and a BA in Modern Languages and Literatures from the University of the West Indies, Trinidad.

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Title: My Mother, My Country