Autofiction and Advocacy in the Francophone Caribbean
Book Details
Author(s)Renee Larrier
PublisherUniversity Press of Florida
ISBN / ASIN0813030056
ISBN-139780813030050
AvailabilityUsually ships in 11 to 13 days
Sales Rank5,772,283
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
Larrier breaks new ground in analyzing first-person narratives by five Francophone Caribbean writers—Joseph Zobel, Patrick Chamoiseau, Gisèle Pineau, Edwidge Danticat, and Maryse Condé—that manifest distinctive interaction among narrators, protagonists, characters, and readers through a layering of voices, languages, time, sources, and identities. Employing the Martinican combat dance—danmyé—as a trope, the author argues that these narratives can be read as testimony to the legacy of slavery, colonialism, and patriarchy that denied Caribbean people their subjectivity.
           In chapters devoted to Zobel, Chamoiseau, Pineau, Danticat, and Condé—who come from Martinique, Guadeloupe, and Haiti—Larrier probes the presence, construction, and strategy of the first-person narrator, which sometimes shifts within the text itself. Providing a perspective different from European travel literature, these texts deliberately position the “I†as a witness and/or performer who articulates experiences ignored or misinterpreted by sojourners’ more widely circulated chronicles. While not purporting to speak for others, the “I†is concerned with transmitting what he or she saw, heard, experienced, or endured, therefore disrupting conventional representations of the Francophone Caribbean. Moreover, in modeling authenticity and agency, autofiction is also a form of advocacy.      Â
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