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Postcolonial Paris Fictions of Intimacy in the City of Light

Title
Postcolonial Paris [electronic resource] : Fictions of Intimacy in the City of Light / Laila Amine.
ISBN
0299315835
9780299315832
0299315800
9780299315801 (cloth)
Published
Madison, Wisconsin : The University of Wisconsin Press, [2018] (Baltimore, Md. : Project MUSE, 2015)
Physical Description
1 online resource (pages cm).
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Notes
Description based on print version record.
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
In the global imagination, Paris is the city's glamorous center, ignoring the Muslim residents in its outskirts except in moments of spectacular crisis such as terrorist attacks or riots. But colonial immigrants and their French offspring have been a significant presence in the Parisian landscape since the 1940s. Expanding the narrow script of what and who is Paris, Laila Amine explores the novels, films, and street art of Maghrebis, Franco-Arabs, and African Americans in the City of Light, including fiction by Charef, Charibi, Guene, Sebbar, Baldwin, Smith, and Wright, and such films as La haine, Made in France, Vivre me tue, and Nuit d'Octobre. Spanning the decades from the post-World War II era to the present day, Amine demonstrates that the postcolonial other is both peripheral to and intimately entangled with all the ideals so famously evoked by the French capital--romance, modernity, equality, and liberty. In their work, postcolonial writers and artists have juxtaposed these ideals with colonial tropes of intimacy (the interracial couple, the harem, the Arab queer) to expose their hidden violence. Amine highlights the intrusion of race in everyday life in a nation where, officially, it does not exist.
Variant and related titles
Project MUSE - 2018 Complete.
Project MUSE - 2018 Literature.
Format
Books / Online
Language
English
Added to Catalog
July 09, 2018
Series
Africa and the diaspora.
UPCC book collections on Project MUSE.
Africa and the diaspora: history, politics, culture
Genre/Form
Electronic books.
Also listed under
Project Muse.
Citation

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