544 research outputs found
"Where the mask ends and the face begins is not certain": Mediating ethnicity and cheating geography in Jonny Steinberg's Little Liberia
Mixing historical commentary, reportage, biography and personal stories, South
African writer Jonny Steinberg takes up the tale of a fractured African nation and its
diaspora in Little Liberia: An African Odyssey in New York City (2011). The "little
Liberia" founded in New York's urban jungle may have represented, for many of its
inhabitants, a way to "cheat geography" by recreating a home away from home, but
Little Liberia shows the reader it has not allowed them to cheat history. The book
deals with the lives of two inhabitants of Park Hill Avenue on Staten Island, where
nearly everyone is Liberian. Their conflict threatens to implode the community, igniting
suspicions and accusations that had been bottled up since their exile. The article
focuses on the interface of mediated ethnicity and citizenship related to the struggle
for power in the diasporic Liberian community on Staten Island. Attention is also paid
to feelings of identity of Little Liberia's author.DHE
Becoming-Bertha: virtual difference and repetition in postcolonial 'writing back', a Deleuzian reading of Jean Rhysâs Wide Sargasso Sea
Critical responses to Wide Sargasso Sea have seized upon Rhysâs novel as an exemplary model of writing back. Looking beyond the actual repetitions which recall BrontĂ«âs text, I explore Rhysâs novel as an expression of virtual difference and becomings that exemplify Deleuzeâs three syntheses of time. Elaborating the processes of becoming that Deleuzeâs third synthesis depicts, Antoinetteâs fate emerges not as a violence against an original identity. Rather, what the reader witnesses is a series of becomings or masks, some of which are validated, some of which are not, and it is in the rejection of certain masks, forcing Antoinette to become-Bertha, that the greatest violence lies
J.M.G. Le ClĂ©zio et Ădouard Glissant: pour une poĂ©tique de la trace
En utilisant les textes que J.M.G Le ClĂ©zio et Edouard Glissant ont Ă©crits pour la collection Peuples de lâeau aux Ă©ditions du Seuil, cet article analyse la façon dont les deux auteurs repensent la notion dâinterculturalitĂ© Ă partir du concept de trace. Ces traces ce sont tout dâabord les signes et les voix quâils dĂ©couvrent lors de leur dĂ©couverte des Ăźles de la PentecĂŽte et de Pacques, Ăźlots isolĂ©es dans lâimmensitĂ© de lâocĂ©an Pacifique. Suivre ces traces devient pour eux une maniĂšre de mettre en avant la dette de lâOccident envers la mĂ©moire de ces peuples mais aussi une invitation Ă lâimaginaire et au rĂ©cit pour restaurer un sens cachĂ© et perdu. En somme, il sâagira de voir comment une poĂ©tique de la trace leur permet de repenser notre rapport aux autres tout en suivant ce que Glissant appelle âLâimaginaire des peuples'
Futurity Island
" Pipe is the primary structural and symbolic unit of the Island, referencing the material that has facilitated worldwide land reclamation throughout the modern era. Once used to drain swamps, pipe becomes a metaphor for a human-centered ecology, an infrastructure of environmental domination and one of the prime symbols of the Anthropocene. In Futurity Island, a network of pipes becomes an artificial skeleton that employs sound to channel what we used to call ânature.â Futurity Island builds a sound infrastructure that brings humans and non-humans into a more symmetrical, collaborative relationship, aiming to transmit and to hear the silenced voices of this planet. " -- Publisher's websit
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