Aboriginal Australians and other "others"

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Joëlle Bonnevin et David Waterman - Aboriginal Australians and other "others".
The contributors to this volume repeatedly point to the pain endured by those who hâve been «Othered» and pay careful attention to the achievements... Lire la suite
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Résumé

The contributors to this volume repeatedly point to the pain endured by those who hâve been «Othered» and pay careful attention to the achievements of Aboriginal Australians and other «Others», who have started to express themselves and to take control of their représentation in order to heal from traumatizing expériences. They denounce the process of «Othering» and stereotyping and put the spotlight on the various attempts at subverting damaging négative stereotypes.
They reveal the «dark side» of the colonial governance strategy of conciliation and study post-colonial rewritings of other colonial gestures such as discovery and conquest. To a certain extent, following Romaine Moreton's advice, they attempt to «reframe those négative expériences».

Caractéristiques

  • Date de parution
    05/06/2015
  • Editeur
  • ISBN
    978-2-84654-390-3
  • EAN
    9782846543903
  • Présentation
    Broché
  • Nb. de pages
    220 pages
  • Poids
    0.344 Kg
  • Dimensions
    15,5 cm × 24,0 cm × 1,2 cm

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À propos des auteurs

Joëlle Bonnevin is Associate Professor at the University of La Rochelle, France. She has been working on the représentation of Ojibwe people and culture in Louise Erdrich's fiction and non-fiction. She is the co-editor of two collections of essays on questions of identity, Représentations et crises identitaires (2011) and Enjeux identitaires (2013), both published at Les Indes savantes. David Waterman is Professor at the University of La Rochelle, France, where he is director of the Applied Foreign Languages department and a member of the research team CRHIA (Center for Research in International and Atlantic History).
His most recent publication is Where Worlds Collide : Pakistani Fiction in the New Millennium, forthcoming from Oxford University Press. He is currently working on Pakistani history, culture and literature in English and has served as an associate editor for Pakistaniaat. Sue Ryan-Fazilleau was Professor of English at the University of La Rochelle, France, where she taught Australian Studies, Aboriginal Studies, Postcolonial and Cultural Studies.
She is the author of Peter Carey et la quête postcoloniale d'une identité australienne (L'Harmattan, Paris, 2007), editor of a collections of essays, NewZealand and Australia : Narrative, History, Représentation (Kakapo Books, London, 2008), and co-editor of three further collections of essays at Les Indes savantes (2008 ; 2010 ; 2013).

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