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Memory as Colonial Capital Erica L. Johnson

Memory as Colonial Capital By Erica L. Johnson

Memory as Colonial Capital by Erica L. Johnson


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Summary

This volume examines the ways that writers from the Caribbean, Africa, and the U.S. theorize and employ postcolonial memory in ways that expose or challenge colonial narratives of the past, and shows how memory assumes particular forms and values in post/colonial contexts in twenty and twenty-first-century works.

Memory as Colonial Capital Summary

Memory as Colonial Capital: Cross-Cultural Encounters in French and English by Erica L. Johnson

This volume examines the ways that writers from the Caribbean, Africa, and the U.S. theorize and employ postcolonial memory in ways that expose or challenge colonial narratives of the past, and shows how memory assumes particular forms and values in post/colonial contexts in twenty and twenty-first-century works. The problem of contested memory and colonial history continues to be an urgent and timely issue, as colonial history has served to crush, erase and manipulate collective and individual memories. Indeed, the most powerful mechanism of colonial discourse is that which alters and silences local histories and even individuals memories in service to colonial authority. Johnson and Brezault work to contextualize the politics of writing memory in the shadow of colonial history, creating a collection that pioneers a postcolonial turn in cultural memory studies suitable for scholars interested in cultural memory, postcolonial, Francophone and ethnic studies.
Includes a foreword by Marianne Hirsch.

About Erica L. Johnson

Erica L. Johnson is Associate Professor in the English Department at Pace University in New York City and the author of Caribbean Ghostwriting (2009) and Home, Maison, Casa (2003). She is also the co-editor with Patricia Moran of The Female Face of Shame (2013) and Jean Rhys: Twenty-First Century Approaches (2015). She has published widely on modernist and postcolonial literature.
Eloise Brezault is Assistant Professor at Saint Lawrence University and the author of Johnny Chien Mechant par Emmanuel Dongala (2012), on the representation of child soldiers in Dongalas novel, Johnny Mad Dog. She has published a collection of interviews with Francophone African writers, Afrique, Paroles decrivains (2010). She currently works as the associate editor of the academic journal Nouvelles Etudes Francophones and she has written numerous articles on Francophone African literature and postcolonial studies.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction.- 2.The Value of Memory in Testimonies on African Civil Wars: Kidders and Beahs Problematic Journey to the West, by Eloise Brezault.- 3. The Intimate Archive of Patrick Chamoiseau, by Erica L. Johnson.- 4. Imagined Encounters: Assia Djebars Vaste est la prison, by Natalie Edwards.- 5.The Bagne as Memory Site: From Colonial Reportage to Postcolonial Traces-memoires, by Charles Forsdick.- 6.Memory, Orality, and Nation-Building in Patrice Nganangs La saison des prunes, by Nathalie Carre.- 7.History, Testimony and Postmemory: The Algerias of Pauline Roland and Assia Djebar, Judith DeGroat. -8. On Exactitude in Poetry: The Cartographic Histories of Garrett Hongos Coral Road, Roy Osamu Kamada.- 9.Remapping the Memory of Slavery: Leonora Mianos Theatrical Dream, Red in blue trilogie, by Judith G. Miller.- 10.Still in the Difficulty: The Afterlives of Archives, by Wendy Walters.

Additional information

NPB9783319505763
9783319505763
3319505769
Memory as Colonial Capital: Cross-Cultural Encounters in French and English by Erica L. Johnson
New
Hardback
Springer International Publishing AG
2017-09-06
202
N/A
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