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This book offers an intriguing account of photobiographic works
ranging from texts containing metaphorical photographs through
ekphrastic narratives to photo-texts. It is dedicated to the
writers who embody an attitude towards the self through the
photographic: Proust, Guibert, Ernaux, and Mace.
Why do photographs interest writers, especially autobiographical
writers? Ever since their invention, photographs have featured - as
metaphors, as absent inspirations, and latterly as actual objects -
in written texts. In autobiographical texts, their presence has
raised particularly acute questions about the rivalry between these
two media, their relationship to the 'real', and the nature of the
constructed self. In this timely study, based on the most recent
developments in the fields of photography theory, self-writing and
photo-biography, Akane Kawakami offers an intriguing narrative
which runs from texts containing metaphorical photographs through
ekphrastic works to phototexts. Her choice of Marcel Proust, Herve
Guibert, Annie Ernaux and Gerard Mace provides unusual readings of
works seldom considered in this context, and teases out surprising
similarities between unexpected conjunctions.
Michaël Ferrier is a prize-winning novelist, essayist and academic
whose cosmopolitan life – he grew up in Chad and France, has
Mauritian roots and lives in Japan – has inspired him to write
some fascinating novels that cross generic and geographical
boundaries. This book is the first ever monograph dedicated to his
works, which explore themes as various as an African childhood,
notions of Frenchness, inter-identities, and post-Fukushima life in
Japan. Hybridity is key to his themes, forms and genres, which
include – as befits a twenty-first century author – a website,
called ‘Tokyo-Time-Table’ and discussed in this study. Kawakami
uses an eclectic range of frameworks to analyse Ferrier’s output,
ranging from translingualism to Environmental Humanities and
Ferrier’s own vision of his oeuvre, which he discloses for the
first time in this book in the interview that he grants Kawakami.
This interview, first published in this volume, is rich in insights
into Ferrier’s views on dreams, Japan, the internet, and
collaborating with other artists. This book is an indispensable
guide to an author who is one of the rising stars of contemporary
French and Francophone literature, and a unique voice that crosses
all kinds of borders across the globe.
Conceived as a second edition to Kawakami's acclaimed A
Self-Conscious Art, which was the first full-length study in
English of Patrick Modiano's work, this book has been
comprehensively updated with two new chapters, notably discussing
the author's recent work and his Nobel Prize win. Kawakami shows
how by parodying precursors such as Proust or the nouveau
romanciers, Modiano's narratives are built around a profound lack
of faith in the ability of writing to retrieve the past through
memory, and this failure is acknowledged in the discreet
playfulness that characterises his novels. This welcome update on
the work of one of the most successful modern French novelists will
be essential reading for scholars working on contemporary French
writing.
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