Chapter 1 Introduction Part 2 North America and the Caribbean Chapter 3 Slavery and Commemoration: Remembering the French Abolitionary Decree 150 Years Later Chapter 4 A Singular Revolution Chapter 5 The Past is passé: Time and Memory in Maryse Condé's La Belle Créole Chapter 6 France and the French in Collective Memory of the Acadians Part 7 Africa and Asia Chapter 8 Film and Colonial Memory: La Croisière Noire 1924-2004 Chapter 9 Trespass of Memory: The French-Indochina War as World War II Chapter 10 Memory and Continuity: The Resistance, the Algerian War, and the Jeanson Network Chapter 11 Intimate Acts and Unspeakable Relations: Remembering Torture and the War for Algerian Independence Chapter 12 Revisiting Ghosts: Louisette Ighilahriz and the Remembering of Torture Chapter 13 The Poetics of Memory in Assia Djebar'sLa Femme sans sépulture: A Study in Paradoxes Chapter 14 A Literature without a Name: René-Nicolas Ehni's Algérie roman Part 15 Postcolonial Migration Chapter 16 Decolonizing the Past: Re-visions of History and Memory and the Evolution of a (Post)Colonial Heritage Chapter 17 The Algerian War Revisited Chapter 18 France and Algeria: Performing the "Impossible Memory" of a Shared Past
Alec G. Hargreaves is Director of the Winthrop-King Institute for Contemporary French and Francophone Studies, Florida State University.
Every essay is accessible, and the collection as a whole serves as
a fine introduction to French postcolonial studies. Summing Up:
Recommended.
*CHOICE*
This collection, an insightful addition to the scholarship on
memories of the French Empire, reaches beyond the confines of
French and francophone studies as some contributions draw parallels
between France's colonial history and the United States' current
policies.
*Research in African Literatures*
To conclude, these essays are generally strong and those working on
the Maghreb... will be appreciative....this series of essays
represents significant work.
*University Of Nebraska Press*
He has skillfully edited and assembled fourteen essays. . . .
Valuable and well worth reading. . . . As for Memory and
Postcolonialism, one must complilment the compiler/editor for the
very logical and coherent way he has assembled a set of disparate
conference papers so as to create a coherent monograph.
*H-Net: Humanities and Social Science Reviews Online, January
2010*
At a time when France is in the throes of dealing with the politics
of memory and coming to grips with its multicultural identity, this
rich collection of essays painstakingly reminds us how much its
destiny is linked to its colonial legacy. The fourteen essays cover
a lot of ground, both geographically and historically; dealing with
recent commemorations such as the 40th anniversary of the Algerian
war, the 150th anniversary of the French abolitionary decree, and
the bicentennial of the Haitian revolution, and more generally with
the diverse guises that the colonial past assumes as it informs
literary, cultural and historical manifestations from the Americas,
Africa, Asia, and Europe . . . This welcome addition to French and
postcolonial studies will be of great interest to historians and
literary scholars.
*Dr. Danielle Marx-Scouras, The Ohio State University*
Edited by Alec G. Hargreaves, Memory, Empire, and Postcolonialism:
Legacies of French Colonialism seeks to analyze and unravel the
complex relationship that exists between past and present French
cultural memory, identity, and national politics in the
postcolonial era of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries....I
highly recommend this book to scholars and students whose research
focuses on the French colonization, postcolonial France,
immigration, and the Algerian War. In addition, this volume will be
equally beneficial to individuals studying slavery, the use of
torture, and the numerous human rights violations that are the
direct result of colonial empires.
*Nineteenth-Century French Studies*
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