POETICS AND ETHICS. THE DOSCOURSE OF THE FRANCOPHONE AUTHOR FACING THE IDEOLOGIES OF BELONGING. BRITTANY, QUEBEC, “AFRICAS”

dc.creatorNdiaye, El Hadji Malick
dc.date.accessioned2025-08-28T08:00:33Z
dc.date.issued2008-03-13
dc.description.abstractAfter having revisited the concept of authorship and analyzed the highly polyphonic and multicultural vocation of the francophone discourse, this work, focusing on three geographical areas (Brittany, Québec, Sub-Saharian Africa) and three authors (Pierre-Jakez Hélias, Félix Leclerc and Cheikh Hamidou Kane), examines the tension between the moral duty of belonging to a minority culture and the universality of the literary project.<br />First, a study of Pierre-Jakez Hélias shows the underexamined biculturalism of some French populations and the uneasy identity of the author in a “French Francophone” context. Then, through Felix Leclerc 's writings, I question the Quebecois author's wor k, whose troubling ambiguity is not entirely accounted for by the myth of a bipolar opposition between English and French. Finally, with the study of potential identities in Kane's novels, I discuss the evidence of a homogeneous black African identity, in order to better assess the relevance of a manifold reading of African cultures in literature. <br />Ultimately, this work demonstrates that Francophone authors are ethically free to overcome biological constraints so their work can bear the hallmark of an assumed “alterculturality”.
dc.identifier.othertel-00269043
dc.identifier.urihttps://hal.science/tel-00269043
dc.identifier.urihttps://africarxiv.ubuntunet.net/handle/1/6681
dc.language.isoen
dc.subjectAfrican Research
dc.titlePOETICS AND ETHICS. THE DOSCOURSE OF THE FRANCOPHONE AUTHOR FACING THE IDEOLOGIES OF BELONGING. BRITTANY, QUEBEC, “AFRICAS”
dc.typeAcademic Publication

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