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Crossroads of Colonial Cultures
The study examines cultural effects of various colonial systems of government in the Spanish- and French-speaking Caribbean in a little investigated period of transition: from the French Revolution to the abolition of slavery in Cuba (1789–1886). The comparison of cultural transfer processes by means of literary production from and about the Caribbean, embedded in a broader context of the circulation of culture and knowledge deciphers the different transculturations of European discourses in the colonies as well as the repercussions of these transculturations on the motherland’s ideas of the colonial other: The loss of a culturally binding centre in the case of the Spanish colonies – in contrast to France’s strong presence and binding force – is accompanied by a multirelationality which increasingly shapes hispanophone Caribbean literature and promotes the pursuit for political independence.The book provides necessary revision to the idea that the 19th-century Caribbean can only be understood as an outpost of the European metropolises. Examining the kaleidoscope of the colonial Caribbean opens new insights into the early processes of cultural globalisation and questions our established concept of a genuine western modernity. Updated and expanded translation of Die koloniale Karibik. Transferprozesse in hispanophonen und frankophonen Literaturen, De Gruyter (mimesis 53), 2012
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Contents
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I Introduction
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I.1 The Colonial Kaleidoscope of the Caribbean
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I.2 Premises
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I.3 Colonial Dynamics in the Caribbean (1789–1886)
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I.4 Debates over Abolition in France and Spain
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I.5 Issues of Conviviality
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II Literature and the Colonial Question
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II.1 Notions of Citizenship (Citoyenneté/Ciudadanía) on the Eve of Independence
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II.2 Between Francophilia and Attempts at Autonomy: The Formation of Postcolonial Theory and the Nineteenth Century
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II.3 Spatial Dynamics and Colonial Positioning
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III Literary Snapshots of the In-Between
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III.1 The Creole Upper Class
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III.2 The Conceptual Inadequacy of the Terms patrie/Nation/Exile
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III.3 Haiti As an In-Between Culture
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III.4 Transfers of Ideas between the Center and the Colony
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III.5 The In-Between and the Figure of the Mulatto
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III.6 The Island Function, or between Nature and Culture
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III.7 Between Trans-Tropical Dimensions: Xavier Eyma and the Philippines
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III.8 Between Literature and the Natural Sciences
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III.9 Digression: Sugar and Skin Color between Metropolis and Colonial Projection
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IV Processes of Ethnological Circulation
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IV.1 “Labeling People”: Discourses of “Race” in France and Spain
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IV.2 The Revue des Colonies as a Transfer Medium Within a French-Speaking Colonial Diaspora
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IV.3 Haiti and the Revue encyclopédique
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IV.4 Literary Transfer Processes in the Revue des deux mondes
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IV.5 Conclusion
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V The Imperial Dimension of French Romanticism: Asymmetrical Relationalities
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V.1 Towards Madrid or Paris?
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V. 2 The Dominant Reception of French Romanticism
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V. 3 Variations of Reception
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V. 4 Hugo as a Model
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V. 5 Chateaubriand as a Model
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V. 6 The Reception of French Romanticism and Its Cultural-Hegemonic Consequences
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V.7 Conviviality and Relationalism in the French Colonial Empire: A Transoceanic Comparison
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VI Transcaribbean Dimensions: New Orleans as the Center of French-speaking Circulation Processes
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VI.1 France and Spain as Colonial Powers in Louisiana
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VI.2 Caribbean Louisiana
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VI.3 Les Cenelles: Writing in the In-Between
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VII Excursus: Paradigm Change within Historical Caribbean Research and Its Narrative Representation
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VII.1 Reading Gómez de Avellaneda with Maryse Condé
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VII.2 Raphaël Confiant
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VII.3 Khal Torabully
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VII.4 J.-M.G. Le Clézio, Édouard Glissant, and Epeli Hau’Ofa: Avant-Gardes in Oceania
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VIII Knowledge about Conviviality, or on the Relevance of Research into the Nineteenth-Century Caribbean
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VIII.1 Norms of Knowledge about Conviviality: Utopias of Caribbeanness
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VIII.2 Forms of Knowledge about Conviviality. An Ethnographic Quest, or the Question of Distance and Separation from the Other
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VIII.3 The Rejection of Essentialist Models of Identity
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- IX Conclusion
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X Works Cited
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X.1 Primary Sources
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X.2 Ethnological Journals
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X.3 Secondary Literature
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- Afterword
- 出版地 : 德國
- 語言 : 德文
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