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Monsters and Revolutionaries Francoise Verges

Monsters and Revolutionaries von Francoise Verges

Monsters and Revolutionaries Francoise Verges


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Zusammenfassung

Analyses the complex relationship between the coloniser and colonised on the Indian Ocean island of Reunion. Through novels, iconography, and texts from various disciplines including law, medicine, and psychology, this title constructs a political and cultural history of the island's relations with France.

Monsters and Revolutionaries Zusammenfassung

Monsters and Revolutionaries: Colonial Family Romance and Metissage Francoise Verges

In Monsters and Revolutionaries Francoise Verges analyzes the complex relationship between the colonizer and colonized on the Indian Ocean island of Reunion. Through novels, iconography, and texts from various disciplines including law, medicine, and psychology, Verges constructs a political and cultural history of the island's relations with France. Woven throughout is Verges's own family history, which is intimately tied to the history of Reunion itself.
Originally settled by sugar plantation owners and their Indian and African slaves following a seventeenth-century French colonial decree, Reunion abolished slavery in 1848. Because plantation owners continued to import workers from India, Africa, Asia, and Madagascar, the island was defined as a place based on mixed heritages, or metissage. Verges reads the relationship between France and the residents of Reunion as a family romance: France is the seemingly protective mother, La Mere-Patrie, while the people of Reunion are seen and see themselves as France's children. Arguing that the central dynamic in the colonial family romance is that of debt and dependence, Verges explains how the republican ideals of the French Revolution and the Enlightenment are seen as gifts to Reunion that can never be repaid. This dynamic is complicated by the presence of metissage, a source of anxiety to the colonizer in its refutation of the purity of racial bloodlines. For Verges, the island's history of slavery is the key to understanding metissage, the politics of assimilation, constructions of masculinity, and emancipatory discourses on Reunion.

Monsters and Revolutionaries Bewertungen

A brilliant piece of work. . . . Monsters and Revolutionaries promises to be an important intervention in the fields of political history and postcolonial discourse.-Ali Behdad, University of California at Los Angeles
[Verges's] richly textured exploration of 'metissage' as a discursive strategy of identification, assimilation, and resistance is driven by a fluent engagement with concepts drawn from contemporary criticism, history, psychoanalysis, and philosophy and has the broadest implications right across the postcolonial world. A major innovative study that will shape the field.-Stuart Hall, Emeritus Professor, The Open University and Goldsmith's College, London

Über Francoise Verges

Francoise Verges is a Lecturer at the School of European Studies at the University of Sussex. She recently collaborated with Isaac Julien on a film about Frantz Fanon.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Illustrations ix
Preface: Bitter Sugar's Island xi
Acknowledgments xix
The Family Romance of French Colonialism and Metissage 1
Contested Family Romances: Slaves, Workers, Children 22
Blood Politics and Political Assimilation 72
Ote Debre, rouver la port lenfer, Diab kominis i sa rentre: Cold War Demonology in the Postcolony 123
Single Mothers, Missing Fathers, and French Psychiatrists 185
Epilogue: A Small Island 246
Notes 251
Bibliography 353
Index 389

Zusätzliche Informationen

GOR013851711
9780822322948
0822322943
Monsters and Revolutionaries: Colonial Family Romance and Metissage Francoise Verges
Gebraucht - Gut
Broschiert
Duke University Press
19990611
416
N/A
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