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Francophone Writing in Transition

Algeria 1900–1945

by Peter Dunwoodie (Author)
©2005 Monographs 339 Pages
Series: Modern French Identities, Volume 42

Summary

Francophone writing in Algeria has traditionally been read as grounded in displacement and erasure of the colonised culture. Yet even the most assimilated évolué remained critical and conscious of a dual allegiance; and even the most resistant underwent significant acculturation, which they had to integrate into their claims to rootedness in a local community (itself jarringly reshaped by colonialism). Their writing (both fiction and non-fiction) is studied here for the first time as the hesitant articulation of strategies of alternative representation and, however modest, of deviance as a form of resistance. Although clearly indebted to the objectives and constraints of the Algerianist aesthetic of the interwar years, it introduced the Muslim Algerian subject into the colonial novel, reorienting or correcting the colonists’ vision thereof and providing an alternative to the latter’s monologic production.

Details

Pages
339
Year
2005
ISBN (Softcover)
9783039102945
Language
English
Keywords
Französisch Literatur Algerien Geschichte 1900-1945 Colonial Algeria francophone writing literature of resistance colonial peritext historical fiction
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Wien, 2005. 339 pp.

Biographical notes

Peter Dunwoodie (Author)

The Author: Peter Dunwoodie is Professor of French literature at Goldsmiths College and Honorary Fellow of the Institute of Germanic and Romance Studies, University of London. He is a comparatist who has published widely on French authors Albert Camus and Louis-Ferdinand Céline, and on Algerian and Caribbean writing. His most recent book, Writing French Algeria, was a study of European Algerian writing between 1830 and 1954.

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Title: Francophone Writing in Transition