Celia Britton is Professor Emerita of French at University College London. Her previous books include The Sense of Community in French Caribbean Fiction (Liverpool University Press, 2010) and the co-edited American Creoles: The Francophone Caribbean and the American South (Liverpool University Press, 2012).
Acknowledgements Abbreviations Introduction Part I: Genre, Intertextuality, Discourse 1. How to be primitive: Tropiques, surrealism and ethnography 2. Problems of Cultural Self-Representation: Ren? M?nil, Patrick Chamoiseau and Rapha?l Confiant 3. Eating their words: the consumption of French Caribbean literature 4. Intertextual Connections: The Jewish Holocaust in French Caribbean Novels 5. Breaking the Rules: Irrelevance/Irreverence in Maryse Cond?'s Travers?e de la mangrove 6. Discursive Agency and the (De)Construction of Subjectivity in Daniel Maximin's L'Ile et une nuit Part II: On Edouard Glissant 7. Discours and histoire, magical and political discourse in Le Quatri?me Si?cle 8. Collective narrative voice in Malemort, La Case du commandeur and Mahagony 9. Fictions of identity and the identities of fiction in Tout-monde 10. Mixing up Languages in the Tout-monde 11. 'La parole du paysage': Art and the Real in Une Nouvelle R?gion du monde Appendix Writing in the Present: Interview with Maryse Cond? Notes Bibliography Index
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