The relationship between power and language has been a central
theme in critical theory for decades now, yet there is still much
to be learned about the sheer force of language in the world in
which we live. In Empire of Language, Laurent Dubreuil explores the
power-language phenomenon in the context of European and,
particularly, French colonialism and its aftermath. Through
readings of the colonial experience, he isolates a phraseology
based on possession, in terms of both appropriation and haunting,
that has persisted throughout the centuries. Not only is this
phraseology a legacy of the past, it is still active today,
especially in literary renderings of the colonial experience but
also, and more paradoxically, in anticolonial discourse. This
phrase shaped the teaching of European languages in the (former)
empires, and it tried to configure the usage of those idioms by the
"Indigenes." Then, scholarly disciplines have to completely
reconsider their discursive strategies about the colonial, if, at
least, they attempt to speak up.
Dubreuil ranges widely in terms of time and space, from the
ancien regime through the twentieth century, from Paris to Haiti to
Quebec, from the Renaissance to the riots in the banlieues. He
examines diverse texts, from political speeches, legal documents,
and colonial treatises to anthropological essays, poems of the
Negritude, and contemporary rap, ever attuned to the linguistic
strategies that undergird colonial power. Equally conversant in
both postcolonial criticism and poststructuralist scholarship on
language, but also deeply grounded in the sociohistorical context
of the colonies, Dubreuil sets forth the conditions for an
authentically postcolonial scholarship, one that acknowledges the
difficulty of getting beyond a colonialism and still maintains the
need for an afterward."
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