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El. knyga: Atlantic Bound: Writing Afro-Atlantic Diasporic Consciousness in the Works of Leonora Miano and Fatou Diome

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  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Serija: Imagining Black Europe 5
  • Išleidimo metai: 10-Feb-2025
  • Leidėjas: Peter Lang International Academic Publishers
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781800797703
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Serija: Imagining Black Europe 5
  • Išleidimo metai: 10-Feb-2025
  • Leidėjas: Peter Lang International Academic Publishers
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781800797703

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«In this first comparative study of novels by Léonora Miano and Fatou Diome, Charlotte Mackay provides a convincing mapping of the evolution of the two authors thinking from a somewhat polarized, colonial notion of Afropean identity towards a more engaged formulation of diasporic identity in a more forward-looking Afro-Atlantic space.»



(Nicki Hitchcott, University of St Andrews)















«Mackays monumental work is a thorough and timely contribution to the growing field of Francophone Afropean Studies. Drawing heavily on Francophone, as well as Anglophone scholarship, Atlantic Bound convincingly displays the strongly Atlantic influence on the writing of Diome and Miano, beyond just Africa and Europe.»



(Christopher Hogarth, University of Bristol)















This book is the first to investigate the literary portrayal of African and Afrodescendant identities in early fictional works by Franco-Cameroonian writer Léonora Miano and Franco-Senegalese writer Fatou Diome. The study shows that the early fictions of these authors are characterized by changes in diasporic directionality and consciousness that increasingly engage with the Afro-Atlantic space. This space is positioned by both authors as the emancipatory site for a valorizing transglobal Africanity to which both continental and diasporic peoples can lay claim.









Through close readings of two novels by each author, Miano and Diomes particular model of Afro-Atlantic diasporic consciousness is illuminated by theory drawn from decolonial, postcolonial, ecocritical, diaspora and feminist literary studies. This comparative reading ultimately suggests that the plight of African and Afrodescendant peoples remains very much present in the literary and affective sensibilities of Miano and Diome and positions them as engagé authors within the broader social context of international movements designed to end the discrimination that people of Sub-Saharan descent still experience globally.
Contents: Conceptualizing African and Afrodescendant identities in a
transnational age: Diasporic consciousness, the Black Atlantic and
Afropeanism Ambivalent Afropea: Navigating marginalization, binaries and
hierarchies Historical consciousness: Connecting the histories of slavery
and (neo)colonization Counter modern consciousness: Questioning modernity
and its Eurocentric premises Feminine consciousness: Reinstating African
women in Black Atlantic dialogue.
Charlotte G. Mackay is a Lecturer in French and Francophone Studies at Monash University in Australia. She completed her PhD in French and Comparative Literature at The University of Melbourne and Sorbonne Université/Paris-IV in 2021. Her research focuses on contemporary literature written by women writers of Sub-Saharan origin, with a particular focus on Léonora Miano and Fatou Diome. She has published peer reviewed articles and book chapters on both writers and her scholarship is committed to questioning dominant narratives of people, place and power.