Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 On the novel and the writing of literary history
- 2 Novels of testimony and the 'invention' of the modern French novel
- 3 Reality and its representation in the nineteenth-century novel
- 4 Women and fiction in the nineteenth century
- 5 Popular fiction in the nineteenth century
- 6 Decadence and the fin-de-siècle novel
- 7 The Proustian revolution
- 8 Formal experiment and innovation
- 9 Existentialism, engagement, ideology
- 10 War and the Holocaust
- 11 From serious to popular fiction
- 12 The colonial and postcolonial Francophone novel
- 13 The French-Canadian novel
- 14 Gender and sexual identity in the modern French novel
- 15 Postmodern Frenchfiction
- General bibliography
- Index
12 - The colonial and postcolonial Francophone novel
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- 1 On the novel and the writing of literary history
- 2 Novels of testimony and the 'invention' of the modern French novel
- 3 Reality and its representation in the nineteenth-century novel
- 4 Women and fiction in the nineteenth century
- 5 Popular fiction in the nineteenth century
- 6 Decadence and the fin-de-siècle novel
- 7 The Proustian revolution
- 8 Formal experiment and innovation
- 9 Existentialism, engagement, ideology
- 10 War and the Holocaust
- 11 From serious to popular fiction
- 12 The colonial and postcolonial Francophone novel
- 13 The French-Canadian novel
- 14 Gender and sexual identity in the modern French novel
- 15 Postmodern Frenchfiction
- General bibliography
- Index
Summary
What is the 'Francophone novel' in relation to the 'French novel' and how do these two traditions form a continuum? This chapter will give an overview of French-speaking areas of the globe beyond Europe (excluding Canada which will be dealt with separately in the next chapter). It concentrates on those areas of francophonie that share a history of colonial domination: sub-Saharan Africa, the Maghreb, the Caribbean and the Indian Ocean, with brief mention of the Mashreq.
These locations have played a crucial role in the development of a specifically French imaginaire since the Renaissance. From Montaigne's cannibals to Montesquieu's Persians, from Baudelaire's exotic tropical islands to Flaubert's Egypt and Nerval's Orient, from André Gide's Voyage au Congo to Hergé's Tintin au Congo, the colonial encounter has marked the imagination of European readers, allowing them to project onto foreign lands and cultures an imaginary reality largely constructed through discourse. Written into Western narratives, the real human subjects of the French empire who were educated in the language and culture of the colonisers have been forced to negotiate with these representations of their identity. Their self-knowledge continues to be mediated by these discursive and literary examples, and many have reacted in strong opposition to these Afriques imaginaires
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to the French NovelFrom 1800 to the Present, pp. 194 - 213Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997
- 1
- Cited by