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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
51

Le personnage métis, une figure hybride ? Identité sexuelle et identité raciale dans la littérature des Amériques / The « Métis » Character : Sexual and Racial Identity in Literature of the Americas

Bourse, Alexandra 02 December 2013 (has links)
La théorie de l’intersectionnalité issue du « Black feminism » permet de concevoir les expériences vécues de la domination par les personnages métis comme intersectionnelles ; s’y mêlent inextricablement des rapports de pouvoir fondés sur la race, le sexe et la classe. Incarnation de relations interraciales perverties par des relations de pouvoir entre peuples dominants et dominés, le personnage métis est interprété par un entourage qui tente de le subsumer à des catégories- raciales et sexuelles- prédéfinies. C’est à cette crispation de la pensée et à cette cécité partagée que nous nous intéressons.Mots-clés : études postcoloniales, genre/gender ; sexualités ; théorie queer ; métissage ; identité ; approche intersectionnelle. / The theory of intersectionnality - resulting from « Black feminism » - is a precious concept to analyze the domination experienced by the « métis » characters as intersectionnal experiments in which power struggles based on race, sex and class are inextricably mixed. Incarnating interracial relations perceived as essentially violent the mestizo/mulatto characters are interpreted by a society which tries to subsume them into preset racial and sexual categories. This crispation of the thought is what we are interested in.Key words: postcolonial studies; genre/gender; sexualities; queer theory; mestizaje/ miscegenation; identity; intersectional analysis.
52

La coopération de défense et de sécurité française en Afrique de l'Ouest : une géopolitique du postcolonial francophone / The French defense and security cooperation in West Africa : geopolitics of francophone postcolonial.

Padonou, Oswald 24 March 2016 (has links)
La coopération structurelle et opérationnelle de défense et de sécurité entre la France et les Etats francophones de la CEDEAO est caractérisée par des configurations différenciées observées d’un Etat à un autre et par la prévalence d’une interdépendance stratégique entre la France et ses partenaires. Depuis 2007, outre le renouvellement des accords instituant un partenariat de défense entre la France et certains de ces partenaires, cette coopération s’insère dans un contexte marqué par la régionalisation des enjeux et des solutions de sécurité ainsi que l’intérêt de nouveaux acteurs favorisant un afflux d’offres d’assistance et de coopération. On sort donc du « huis-clos » bilatéral des accords post-indépendances et des pratiques qui en ont résulté, pour analyser la relation Afrique-France à l’aune de plusieurs paramètres déterminés par ses évolutions récentes. Cette étude ambitionne dans une perspective postcolonialiste, de déconstruire les oppositions binaires et la généralisation en apportant des outils de mesure et de comparaison de la coopération, dans le temps et dans l’espace ; en mettant en exergue les nuances ; en proposant une typologie et surtout en relevant les bénéfices que procure la coopération à chaque catégorie d’acteur. A partir de la théorie du comportement coopératif de Robert Axelrod, notamment sa variante « donnant-donnant », il est démontré que la pérennisation de la coopération réside dans l’intérêt des parties à coopérer qui surpasse l’abstention. En raison de ce dépassement du « fait » et de « l’héritage colonial », le postcolonialisme pourrait alors représenter un modèle d’analyse des relations internationales contemporaines et la Francophonie, un espace empreint de « profondeur stratégique ». / Structural and operational defense and security cooperation between France and Francophone states of ECOWAS is characterized by different configurations depending on the perspectives of each stakeholder. They are also characterized by strategic interdependence between France and its partners. Since 2007, besides the renewal of agreements setting up a defence partnership between France and its partners, this cooperation is taking place in a context marked by the regionalization of stakes and security responses in the West African region and the increasing interest of non-traditional actors providing increasing flows of assistance and cooperation. These new parameters breaking the traditional behind “closed-doors” of bilateral post-independance agreements, practices and interpretations that were traditionally mobilized to analyse Africa-France relations. By using a postcolonial perspective, this study aims at deconstructing conventional binary oppositions and generalizations by bringing in new tools of comparison of cooperation, in time and space and by highlighting the nuances. It also aims at suggesting a typology of the benefits that different categories of actors gain from this cooperation. Building on Robert Axelrod’s theory of cooperative attitude, and its ”win-win” component, this study demonstrates that the lasting of cooperation resides in the interests each party finds in cooperating beyond abstaining. Due to this capacity to rise above the "fact" and "colonial legacy", the postcolonialism could then be a model of analysis of contemporary international relations and “Francophonie”, a space marked of "strategic depth".
53

Décolonisation des subjectivités et renaissance africaine : critique et réforme de la modernité chez Scholastique Mukasonga, Ngugi wa Thiong’o et Valentin-Yves Mudimbe / Decolonization of subjectivities and african renaissance : criticism and reform of modernity by Scholastique Mukasonga, Ngugi wa Thiong'o and Valentin-Yves Mudimbe

Boizette, Pierre 21 May 2019 (has links)
L’institutionnalisation des études postcoloniales et l’essor récent du champ décolonial ont mis en évidence la reconnaissance dont bénéficient aujourd’hui les intellectuels issus d’anciens territoires colonisés. Parmi eux, Ngugi wa Thiong’o et Valentin-Yves Mudimbe sont des figures respectées dont les écrits, aussi bien théoriques que fictionnels, cherchent à résoudre les crises générées par l’expérience coloniale. Conscients que celle-ci ne s’est pas achevée avec la vague des indépendances, ils maintiennent éveillé dans leurs œuvres le désir utopique qu’elles avaient vu naître, celui de concevoir un monde nouveau où les relations entre les peuples et les individus seraient renégociées, et ce, malgré les désillusions de la période qui leur succéda. Pourtant, la survenue, en 1994, du génocide des Tutsi du Rwanda aurait bien pu symboliser l’échec de leurs entreprises de détachement épistémique avec la modernité occidentale. Celui-ci consistait en effet en la réitération, sur le continent africain, d’un crime semblable à celui qui avait poussé nombre d’intellectuels à vouloir rompre avec l’ordre dont la Shoah était la conséquence. Néanmoins, bien au contraire, les textes de Scholastique Mukasonga témoignent de la reprise de l’impératif formulé par Ngugi wa Thiong’o et Valentin-Yves Mudimbe, à savoir le besoin de parvenir à une décolonisation des subjectivités pour initier une renaissance africaine. L’étude de chacune de leurs trajectoires a pour ambition de montrer la complémentarité de ces deux processus dans leurs œuvres qui, séparément, ouvrent la voie à de multiples futurs possibles pour l’humanité. / The institutionalization of postcolonial studies and the recent development of decolonial studies have highlighted the recognition that intellectuals from former colonized territories enjoy today. Among them, Ngugi wa Thiong'o and Valentin-Yves Mudimbe are respected figures whose writings, both theoretical and fictional, seek to resolve the crises generated by the colonial experience. Aware that this did not end with the wave of independence, they kept alive in their works the utopian desire, that of conceiving a new world where relations between peoples and individuals would be renegotiated, despite the disappointments of the postcolonial regimes. However, the 1994 genocide of the Tutsis in Rwanda could well have symbolized the failure of their epistemic detachment efforts with Western modernity. This consisted in the repetition, on the African continent, of a crime similar to the one that had pushed many intellectuals to want to break with the order of which the Shoah was the consequence. On the contrary, Scholastique Mukasonga's texts bear witness to the repetition of the imperative formulated by Ngugi wa Thiong'o and Valentin-Yves Mudimbe, namely the need to achieve a decolonization of subjectivities to initiate an African renaissance. The study of each of their trajectories aims to show the complementarity of these two processes in their works which, separately, open the way to multiple possible futures for humanity.
54

Blancura Situacional e Imperio Español en su Historia, Cine y Literatura (s.XIX-XX)

Perez Sanchez, Jose Maria 01 January 2016 (has links)
This dissertation studies identity formation and race informed by the discipline Whiteness Studies. As such this dissertation conceptualizes Spanish Whiteness historically and analyzes its representation in Spanish narrative in prose and film. This research responds to two questions: 1) How has Spanish culture historically instrumentalized Blackness thus contributing to the creation of the Western’s conceptualization of Whiteness? 2) What does Spanish representation of Empire say about its Whiteness? In an effort to answer these questions, this study is divided into two parts that correspond to the conceptualization and representation of what are termed ‘Situational Whiteness’ and ‘Imperial Spanish Orientalism.’ I argue that both are the result of a Spanish differential exceptionalism based on Orientalist cultural practices of tactical assimilation, by means of which the Black experience is subsumed on the margins as a part of Spanish Whiteness. To prove this hypothesis, Spanish Whiteness is conceptualized for the purpose of exploring the strategies of tactical assimilation of the Spanish Orientalism (Hispanism, Arabism, Africanism, Hispanotropicalism) towards its former colonies in Latin America and Africa. In addition, the contrasting cases of instrumentalization of Blackness as resistance in José Martí and Fernando Ortiz’s notion of Cuban racial ‘counterpoint’ as well as and the racial ‘particularism’ of Joan Maragall and Blas Infante inform cultural notions of Spanish Whiteness as well as its fragmentation. In the second part of this dissertation, the analysis focuses on understudied cases of the Spanish Imperial Whiteness’s representation in relation to Equatorial Guinean and Afro-Cuban Blackness. The overall propose of this research is, on the one hand, to explain how the situational nature of Spanish Whiteness is present throughout foundational moments in diverse forms of Spanish Orientalism; and, on the other hand, to inform Whiteness Studies from a different cultural angle thus providing the discipline with a transnational bridge towards a better understanding of white processes of racial formation, historical strategies and cultural forms of structural domination.
55

Les Romans de J.-M. G. Le Clézio : rôle de l’écrivain contemporain dans la fondation d’une littérature mondiale considérée comme pratique littéraire / J.-M.G. Le Clézio’s Novels : the Role of the Contemporary Writer in the Foundation of a World Literature Considered as a Literary Practice

Paradis Dufour, Julien 26 January 2018 (has links)
Le concept de littérature nationale s’est développé de façon concomitante avec le concept d’État-nation en Europe à partir de la fin du XVIIIe siècle. L’État-nation est rendu possible en partie par la littérature qui agit, par un discours culturel, comme un vecteur déterminant permettant à une telle communauté de s’imaginer. L’institutionnalisation de la littérature sert alors d’outil aux pouvoirs et aux élites en place dans le double objectif d’asseoir leur dominance et de créer un sentiment d’identité nationale, non sans une certaine violence : une partie de la diversité culturelle évoluant à l’intérieur de la juridiction de l’État-nation est sacrifiée au profit de l’unité. Les premiers nationalismes modernes se développent en Europe dans un climat de rivalité : c’est en opposant sa propre culture à celle des États environnants que l’on cherche à définir son identité. L’objectif de notre thèse est d’étudier le rôle de l’écrivain contemporain dans la formation d’une littérature permettant à une communauté, cette fois mondiale, de s’imaginer. Nous analysons l’œuvre romanesque de J.-M.G. Le Clézio afin de dégager les stratégies mises en place qui permettent aux différents peuples du monde d’éprouver le sentiment d’appartenir à un groupe global dépassant les frontières de la nation tout en conservant la spécificité que chacun est en droit de revendiquer. Ainsi, le roman leclézien s’inscrit à plusieurs égards dans la tradition goethéenne de la Weltliteratur, qui se fait le pendant des littératures nationales : la littérature mondiale devient à son tour instrument devant promouvoir une identité et une unité, à la différence que ces dernières se vivent désormais dans la diversité assumée et dans un rapport lucide de relation plutôt que dans la rivalité. / The concept of national literature evolved in 18th century’s Europe at the same time as the concept of nation-states. As a matter of fact, nation-states were in part made possible by literature, which acts, because of the cultural discourse it conveys, as a key vector that enables communities to imagine themselves. The institutionalization of literature served as a powerful tool for the leaders and elites of each community. They used it to establish their dominance and create a sense of national identity. This institutionalization was often conducted with a certain violence, that is, by sacrificing—for the benefit of unity—part of the cultural diversity that was flourishing inside the nation-state’s borders. Moreover, modern nationalism was born in Europe in a climate of rivalry: it is by opposing one’s own culture to that of one’s neighbours that one sought to define one’s own identity. The objective of our thesis is to study the role of the contemporary writer in the creation of a literature whose objective is, this time, to allow the world’s global community to imagine itself. We analyze the novels of J.-M.G. Le Clézio to identify the strategies he uses to allow the world’s different nations to feel they belong to a global group while preserving the specificity they are entitled to claim. Le Clézio’s novels fit in several respects in the Goethian notion of Weltliteratur, that of a literature that’s a counterpart of national literatures. That world literature then becomes an instrument to promote a new identity and unity in a world where diversity is now valued and lucid relationships have replaced rivalry.
56

Citizens of a Genre: Forms, Fields and Practices of Twentieth-Century French and Francophone Ethnographic Fiction

Izzo, Justin January 2011 (has links)
<p>This dissertation examines French and Francophone texts, contexts and thematic problems that comprise a genre I call "ethnographic fiction," whose development we can trace throughout the twentieth century in several geographic locations and in distinct historical moments. During the twentieth century in France, anthropology as an institutionalized discipline and "literature" (writ large) were in constant communication with one another. On the one hand, many French anthropologists produced stylized works demonstrating aesthetic sensibilities that were increasingly difficult to classify. On the other hand, though, poets, philosophers and other literary intellectuals read, absorbed, commented on and attacked texts from anthropology. This century-long conversation produced an interdisciplinary conceptual field allowing French anthropology to borrow from and adapt models from literature at the same time as literature asserted itself as more than just an artistic enterprise and, indeed, as one whose epistemological prerogative was to contribute to and enrich the understanding of humankind and its cultural processes. In this dissertation I argue that fiction can be seen to travel in multiple directions within France's twentieth-century conversation between literature and anthropology such that we can observe the formation of a new genre, one comprised of texts that either explicitly or more implicitly fuse fictional forms and contents together with the methodological and representational imperatives of anthropology and ethnographic fieldwork. Additionally, I argue that fiction moves geographically as well, notably from the metropole to Francophone West Africa which became an anthropological hotspot in the twentieth century once extended field research was legitimated in France and armchair anthropology was thoroughly discredited. By investigating ethnographies, novels, memoirs and films produced both in metropolitan France, Francophone West Africa, and the French Caribbean (including texts by Michel Leiris, Amadou Hampâté Bâ, Jean Rouch, Jean-Claude Izzo and Raphaël Confiant), I aim to shed light on the kinds of work that elements of fiction perform in ethnographic texts and, by contrast, on how ethnographic concepts, strategies and fieldwork methods are implicitly or explicitly adopted and reformulated in more literarily oriented works of fiction. Ethnographic fiction as a genre, then, was born not only from the epistemological rapprochement of anthropology and literature in metropolitan France, but from complex and often fraught encounters with the very locations where anthropological praxis was carried out.</p> / Dissertation
57

Povos indígenas na universidade: ação afirmativa e a geopolítica do conhecimento

Mattioli, Érica Aparecida Kawakami 01 October 2014 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2016-06-02T20:38:29Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 6495.pdf: 1599825 bytes, checksum: 46334cc19f4f978d579fcb0db20a2867 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2014-10-01 / Financiadora de Estudos e Projetos / The selectivity concerning the access of indigenous students to Brazilian higher education have been due to the practices formed racially and the understanding of the political strategy of the education for the recognition of the otherness has appeased the definition of public policies of Affirmative Actions (AA) for groups historically considered subaltern. Affirmative action is often conceptualized as strategic mechanism when both racial tension and socio-economic inequality exist in order to counter the effects of a colonial history of discrimination and disadvantaging that has left huge silences and deformations in the historical narratives about indigenous people and their knowledge, philosophies, bodies and cultures. Therefore, we also can think about affirmative action in its epistemological dimension. A post-colonial reading of affirmative action policies in Brazilian universities focused on indigenous people provided the basis for our analysis. We argue that AA policies have a potential force to produce epistemological disruptions in university contexts. The goal of this research is both to analyze and to describe sociologically the experiences of indigenous students from different ethnic groups in the context of Affirmative Action Policies Program at Federal University of São Carlos. This study ends presenting discussions on how we can epistemologically rethink AA policies in Brazilian universities, especially regarding to indigenous people. / O presente trabalho debruça-se sobre a política de ação afirmativa para acesso ao ensino superior no Brasil, num cenário em que diferentes argumentos que a justifica se encontram e se tensionam. Numa perspectiva de analítica pós-colonial buscamos discutir a crescente presença dos povos indígenas nas universidades, tendo em vista que o pós-colonial constrói sua crítica ao modo como o conhecimento científico tem sido produzido e posto em circulação. Observamos que, no geral, as universidades públicas brasileiras operam em função de concepções e representações forjadas nas relações coloniais, de modo que em seus espaços, formas de produção, validação, aplicação e circulação de conhecimentos ainda são definidas a partir de uma matriz epistemológica ocidental, eurocentrada, racializada. Ao considerar o racismo inscrito nas matrizes das ciências e o fato de que houve e há hierarquização dos conhecimentos, a crítica póscolonial leva a cabo o exercício epistemológico de desfamiliarização das experiências antes racializadas e de desconstrução do vocabulário colonial a partir do qual elas têm sido nomeadas, conhecidas e inscritas nos imaginários. Nesse sentido, temos nos perguntado se as presenças indígenas podem provocar algum tipo de deslocamento (epistemológico, metodológico, cultural, político) no contexto da universidade. Mais especificamente, as presenças indígenas nas universidades podem constituir-se em possibilidade de deslocar o espaço-tempo dos signos, deslocar os contextos de significação? Podem constituir-se como possibilidade de produção de novos sentidos e de novos arranjos das diferenças? Tendem a provocar mudanças na própria institucionalização dos programas de ação afirmativa das universidades? A experiência em curso na Universidade Federal de São Carlos nos tem permitido conceber a política de ação afirmativa como estratégia que pode possibilitar deslocamentos nas representações acerca da diferença e, em alguma medida, levar a desarranjos epistemológicos.
58

L'écriture de la violence dans le roman de l'Afrique Subsaharienne (domaines anglophones, francophones, lusophones) / writing the violence in the sub-saharan african novel (lusophone, anglophone and francophone areas)

Vilar, Fernanda 13 October 2015 (has links)
Le développement des études postcoloniales a offert une grille de lecture nouvelle pour penser la production littéraire des pays qui ont enduré la domination coloniale. Dans ce contexte, le roman africain a subi plusieurs modifications et a connu de nouvelles expériences poétiques après les indépendances. Nous avons choisi d’analyser six œuvres notoires venues de trois inspirations littéraires nationales distinctes pour porter un regard comparatiste sur les différents types de violence que nous pouvons retrouver dans ces romans. Malgré une histoire coloniale et postcoloniale différente dans chaque pays, nous verrons que les motifs liés à la violence se répètent. Nous avons étudié le produit de l’expérience de la violence sur les plans structurel et narratif dans l’œuvre de Mia Couto, Sony Labou Tansi et J.M. Coetzee. Sur le plan narratif d’une part, l’abus de pouvoir, la construction de stéreotypes, l’oppression et l’orphelinat montrent la fertilité de cette littérature qui vise à déstabiliser l’ordre établi et à offrir une nouvelle version des faits. Sur le plan structurel d’autre part, l’humour ou les créations langagières révèlent l’envie de traduire et d’hybridiser les cultures. / The development of postcolonial studies has provided a new interpretative framework in which to think about the literary production of countries that have undergone colonialism. In this context, the African novel has been transformed and new poetic elements have appeared after independence. I have chosen to analyze six novels from three distinct national literary inspirations to carry a comparative analysis comparing different types of violence. Despite the differences found between the colonization and independence processes, I noticed that the issues related to violence are often repeated. My aim has been to study the experience of violence through Mia Couto’s, Sony Labou Tansi’s and JM Coetzee’s narrative work, examining for instance, the abuse of power, the construction of stereotypes, oppression and the utilization of orphanages to show the richness of this literature that aims at unsettling the established order and offering a new version of past events; and also on the structural level, humor or linguistic creations reveal the desire to translate and hybridize cultures.
59

L'émergence et le développement de la voix féminine dans la littérature kenyane postcoloniale / The Emergence and the Development of the Female voice in Postcolonial Kenyan Fiction

Wanjala, Alex Nelungo 05 December 2009 (has links)
Cette étude de la littérature kenyane, qui concerne principalement des auteurs féminins, a comme postulat que les écrivaines du Kenya, bien que prolifiques, ont été pendant très longtemps négligées par la critique littéraire et souvent étudiées dans le cadre de la littérature feminine du soi-disant “tiers monde.” Leur spécificité était ainsi occultée. Cette étude entreprend de remédier à cette situation en faisant une analyse détaillée de quelques romans représentatifs tout en utilisant le genre romanesque comme document social reflétant la position de la femme dans la société kenyane. Le roman, qui est ici le document principal, est donc examiné en tant qu’outil culturel. Etant donné le nombre élevé de romans écrits par des auteures kenyanes, cette étude utilise une méthodologie orientée vers des cas, sélectionnant les romans les plus représentatifs de la littérature féminine kenyane. Ces textes recouvrent une longue période allant des premières publications romanesques dans les années 60, juste après l’indépendance du Kenya, jusqu’au début du millénaire.Les théories utilisées dans cette analyse émanent des études postcoloniales, des “cultural studies,” et des études de genre. Cette étude fournit donc un survol détaillé du roman féminin kenyan, qui ambitionne de susciter des études semblables sur les écrivaines du Kenya mais également d’autres pays de l’Afrique de l’Est et, de manière plus large, du continent africain. / This study of Kenyan literature, which focuses specifically on female writers, is based on the premise that female writers, though prolific, have for a long time been neglected by literary critics, and even when focused upon, are lumped together with other so-called ‘Third world’ female writers. Thus, the idiosyncrasies in their particular works are very often overlooked. This study seeks to correct this by undertaking an in-depth study of each of the novels explored, while at the same time using each of them to undertake a study of the Kenyan society with particular attention to the situation of the woman as depicted in the texts. The novel, which is here the primary source, is examined as a cultural tool. Given the large number of novels that have been written by Kenyan women writers, this study uses a case-oriented methodology to select a few novels that are used as representative samples for Kenyan writing by women. The texts selecte! d cover a long time period; published from the mid-sixties just after Kenya’s independence, to the outset of the present millennium. The study is guided by theories that are drawn from postcolonial studies, cultural studies, and gender studies. It is our hope that this study gives a comprehensive state of the art survey on the Kenyan novel, with a specific focus on the state of the Kenyan woman, thus clearing the way for similar studies to be carried out on women writers not only in Kenya, but in the other countries in the East African region and the African continent at large.
60

Women staging the French Caribbean : history, memory, and authorship in the plays of Ina Césaire, Maryse Condé, Gerty Dambury, and Suzanne Dracius

Lee, Vanessa January 2017 (has links)
This thesis analyses the themes of history, memory, and authorship in the works of four women playwrights from the French Caribbean islands of Martinique and Guadeloupe. In doing so, it aims to reveal the three levels of marginalization to which Caribbean women theatre practitioners are subjected: being a woman, being a French Caribbean woman, and being a French Caribbean woman who writes theatre. The thesis seeks to contribute to the expansion of the field of French Caribbean literary and drama studies, endeavours to redress the gender balance in studies on French Caribbean literature, and aspires to add to the existing body of work on French Caribbean women's writing. Therefore, the thesis aims to reveal and to analyse the world of French Caribbean women's theatre and to study how the playwrights address socio-political issues that affect their communities and influence their own writings and careers. The corpus consists of plays by Gerty Dambury, Ina Césaire, Maryse Condé, and Suzanne Dracius from the 1980s to the early 2000s. While focussing on a different theme, each chapter rests its analysis on theatrical works of a similar genre. The analysis of the plays deploys theories of the theatre pertaining to postcolonial drama and gender. The first chapter serves as an introduction to a group of female French Caribbean writers and their predecessors. The second chapter is a study of two historical plays, focussing on the collective experience of historical events and the role played by women in those events. The third chapter analyses plays that problematize the relationship between the collective and the individual. The fourth chapter looks at the image of the French Caribbean female artist and the multiple barriers she encounters in achieving creative independence.

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