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The Reparative in Narratives - Works of Mourning in Progress (Paperback)
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The Reparative in Narratives - Works of Mourning in Progress (Paperback)
Series: Contemporary French and Francophone Cultures, 13
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The authors studied in this book can be visualized as the islands
that constitute an unknown, fragile and trembling literary and
cultural Francophone archipelago. The archipelago does not appear
on any map, in the middle of an ocean whose name we already know.
No Francophone anthology would put these authors together as a
matter of course because what connects them is a narrative grammar
rather than a national origin or even a language. Yet, their
writing techniques and their apprehension of the real (the ways in
which they know and name the world) both reflect and actively
participate in our evolving perception of what Gayatri Spivak calls
the "planet". The Reparative in Narratives argues that argue that
they repair trauma through writing. One description of these
awe-inspiring, tender and sometimes horrifying tales is that their
narrators are survivors who have experienced and sometimes
inflicted unspeakable acts of violence. And yet, ultimately,
despair, nihilism, cynicism or silence are never the consequences
of their encounter with what some quickly call evil. The traumatic
event has not killed them and has not killed their desire to write
or perform, although the decidedly altered life that they live in
the aftermath of the disaster forces them to become different types
of storytellers. They are the first-person narrators of their
story, and their narration reinvents them as speaking subjects. In
turn, this requires that we accept new reading pacts. That pact is
a temporal and geographical signature: the reparative narrative
needs readers prepared to accept that healing belongs to the realm
of possibilities and that exposure and denunciation do not exhaust
the victim's range of possibilities. Rosello contends that this
context-specific yet repeating pattern constitutes a response to
the contemporary figuration of both globalized and extremely
localized types of traumatic memories.
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