Literary Journalism and Africa's Wars - Colonial, Decolonial and Postcolonial Perspectives - Grand Format

Textes en français et anglais

Andrew Griffiths

,

Audrey Alvès

,

Alice Trindade

Collectif

Note moyenne 
This collection of essays explores ways in which early and late examples of literary journalism from England, France, Spain, Portugal and the United States... Lire la suite
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Résumé

This collection of essays explores ways in which early and late examples of literary journalism from England, France, Spain, Portugal and the United States interpolate the aesthetics of war reporting on various fronts and at divergent times in Africa's history, both reproducing and deconstructing the widespread colonial discourse that lies behind nearly every war, campaign, coup, assassination and pogrom that has scarred the continent over the past century.
Although often a product of that colonial discourse, the literary journalism examined in this collection was motivated at least in part by the desire to expose the power imbalances that upheld it. Among the primary sources included in this volume are texts by Henry Morton Stanley, Ramón J. Sender, Martinho Simões, Frederick Forsyth, Kurt Vonnegut, Ryszard Kapuscinski, Philip Gourevitch, Jean Hatzfeld and a host of foreign correspondents from Le Monde.
Incorporating a wide range of international critical perspectives, this book assesses the impact literary journalism has had on various nations' literary war reporting emanating from colonialist and postcolonialist conflicts and how those stories might help to reconfigure certain historical legacies, journalistic heuristics and literary representations of Africa in the 21st century. By presenting excerpts from several primary sources alongside a contextual gloss and a scholarly essay, the collection highlights the varied effects produced when literary techniques were fused with factual war reporting.

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L'éditeur en parle

Cet ouvrage, destiné au public universitaire, examine par quel biais le journalisme littéraire anglais, français, espagnol , portugais et américain interpolent l'esthétique du reportage de guerre en Afrique, reproduisant et déconstruisant le discours colonialiste qui est à l'origine de presque toutes les guerres, les coups d'Etat , les assassinats et les pogroms qui ont frappé le continent au cours du dernier siècle.
Intégrant un large éventail de perspectives critiques, l'ouvrage évalue l'impact de ce journalisme littéraire sur les conflits colonialistes et postcolonialistes et examine comment ces récits pourraient aider à reconfigurer certains héritages historiques, heuristiques journalistiques et représentations littéraires de l'Afrique au 21e siècle.

À propos des auteurs

Andrew Griffiths, PhD is Associate Lecturer at Plymouth University and the Open University in the UK. His research focuses primarily on the relationship between journalism, literature and imperialism in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, with a particular emphasis on war correspondence. Audrey Aloès, PhD is Senior Lecturer in Information and Communication Sciences at the Université de Lorraine in France, where she is a member of the Center for Research on Mediations (CREM) and a specialist in the relationship between joumalism and literature.
Alice Trindade, PhD is Associate Professor with the Instituto Superior de Ciências Sociais e Políticas at the Universidade de Lisboa in Portugal, where she is a member of the Centre for Public Policy and Administration (CAPP). A founding member of the International Association for Literary Journalism Studies (IALJS), she was president of the Association from 2010 to 2012.

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