
This Book Is The First Major Study Of French Caribbean Literature In Light Of The Concept Of Postcoloniality. Postcolonial Theory Debates Have Developed In The Anglophone Domain, And Have Not As Yet Referred Prominently To Francophone Literature. Jeannie Suk Investigates How The Literature Of Martinique And Guadeloupe Provides A Kaleidescopic View Of The Paradoxes At The Heart Of Postcoloniality. Through Subtle And Provocative Readings Of Aimé Césaire, Edouard Glissant, Maryse Condé, Baudelaire, Freud, And Others, She Illuminates How The Development Of French Caribbean Literature And Debates About Négritude, Antillanité, And Creolité Contribute To Theories Of In-betweenness And Incompleteness Central To Postcolonial Modes. In Each Chapter, Lively And Detailed Analyses Of Literary And Critical Texts Reveal Connections Between Key Thematic, Conceptual, Rhetorical, And Psychic Issues That Form The Interface Of Caribbean And Postcolonial Concerns. The First Part Paves Theoretical Ground, Focusing On Readings Of Two Seminal Texts, Césaire's Cahier D'un Retour Au Pays Natal And Glissant's Discours Antillais; The Second Part Concentrates On Maryse Condé's Exemplary Work. Lucidly Articulating The Overlap And Interplay Of The Distance Of Oceanic Crossing, The Discontinuities Of Allegorical Signification, And The Gap At The Heart Of Trauma, Suk Probes The Paradoxical Dynamic Of Impossible Yet Inevitable Returns In Space, Time, And The Psyche. She Shows How Literal And Metaphorical Crossings Both Produce And Impede History And Representation. The Result Is A New Framework For Understanding The Intersection Of Postcolonial, Psychoanalytic, Deconstructive, And French Caribbean Problems In A Language Attentive To Improbable Recurrences Across Theories And Registers. Postcolonial Paradoxes Is A Major Contribution To Criticism And Theory, Of Interest To Scholars And Students Of Postcolonialism, Caribbean And African Diaspora Literature, French Literature, And Psychoanalysis.
This book investigates how French Caribbean literature challenges and expands the conceptual framework of postcolonial theory by highlighting the inherent paradoxes of identity, history, and representation. Jeannie Suk, a scholar of literature and law, utilizes a multidisciplinary approach that bridges Anglophone postcolonial theory with Francophone literary traditions. By analyzing the works of prominent Caribbean authors alongside psychoanalytic and deconstructive frameworks, she argues that the literature of Martinique and Guadeloupe offers a unique perspective on the themes of in-betweenness and incompleteness.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and students of postcolonial studies frequently cite this work for its rigorous application of psychoanalytic theory to Francophone texts. The text is noted for its high level of academic density and its contribution to the dialogue between Caribbean literature and global critical theory.
Page Count:
218
Publication Date:
2001-01-01
Publisher:
Clarendon Press
ISBN-10:
0191584401
ISBN-13:
9780191584404
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