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Nationalists and Nomads

Essays on Francophone African Literature and Culture

How does African literature written in French change the way we think about nationalism, colonialism, and postcolonialism? How does it imagine the encounter between Africans and French? And what does the study of African literature bring to the fields of literary and cultural studies? Christopher L. Miller explores these and other questions in Nationalists and Nomads.

Miller ranges from the beginnings of francophone African literature—which he traces not to the 1930s Negritude movement but to the largely unknown, virulently radical writings of Africans in Paris in the 1920s—to the evolving relations between African literature and nationalism in the 1980s and 1990s. Throughout he aims to offset the contemporary emphasis on the postcolonial at the expense of the colonial, arguing that both are equally complex, with powerful ambiguities. Arguing against blanket advocacy of any one model (such as nationalism or hybridity) to explain these ambiguities, Miller instead seeks a form of thought that can read and recognize the realities of both identity and difference.



272 pages | 22 halftones | 6 x 9 | © 1999

African Studies

Anthropology: Cultural and Social Anthropology

Culture Studies

Literature and Literary Criticism: African Languages, General Criticism and Critical Theory, Romance Languages

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction - History and Hybridity
1. Involution and Revolution
African Paris in the 1920s
2. Hallucinations of France and Africa
3. Revolution and Involution in Images
4. Nationalism as Resistance and Resistance to Nationalism
5. African Literature and the Challenge of Intercultural Literacy
6. Beyond Identity: The Postidentitarian Predicament in Deleuze and Guattari’s A Thousand Plateaus
Notes
Index

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