
TheCambridge Introduction to Francophone Literature
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Published by: hmimi (Karma: 167.25) on 19 November 2013 | Views: 987 |
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Tahar Ben Jelloun, theMartinican PatrickChamoiseau, the LebaneseAmin Maalouf (PrixGoncourt), Ivory Coast’s Ahmadou Kourouma (Prix Renaudot) and a string of writers such as Jonathan Littell (Goncourt), Dai Sijie, Franc¸ois Cheng (Prix Femina) and Andre¨ı Makine (Goncourt/M´edicis) who are at best French by ‘adoption’.Moreover, one of the latest additions to the group of forty ‘immortels’ who make up the Acad´emie franc¸aise is the celebrated Algerian novelist Assia Djebar. The tenuousness of the link between the French national space and an increasingly dynamic domain of literary output is one of the key, perhaps defining, characteristics of the field this book sets out to investigate: francophone literature. Yet it is highly questionable whether the term ‘francophone literature’ can be applied with any degree of accuracy to an easily identifiable and unchallenged corpus of texts. Part of the reason for this is that the word ‘francophone’ itself has become something of a label of convenience that often masks as much as it reveals. So any attempt at providing even a working notion of what ‘francophone literature’ is must begin by examining the terms francophone and francophonie in some detail. The francophone world Undoubtedly the most graphic way of representing the notion of francophonie is through maps. Just as vast tracts of the globe were formerly coloured pink to represent the territories ruled by the British Empire, so it is still possible today to map the world in ways
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Tags: literature, prize, recent, years, Booker, TheCambridge, Literature, Introduction, Francophone |