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Savoir-vivre feminin et faire-savoir...
~
Khabarovskiy, Georgy.
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Savoir-vivre feminin et faire-savoir colonial dans les recits de voyage feminins de l'entre-deux-guerres.
Record Type:
Electronic resources : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Savoir-vivre feminin et faire-savoir colonial dans les recits de voyage feminins de l'entre-deux-guerres./
Author:
Khabarovskiy, Georgy.
Published:
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, : 2018,
Description:
215 p.
Notes:
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 80-07, Section: A.
Contained By:
Dissertations Abstracts International80-07A.
Subject:
French literature. -
Online resource:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=10982502
ISBN:
9780438781672
Savoir-vivre feminin et faire-savoir colonial dans les recits de voyage feminins de l'entre-deux-guerres.
Khabarovskiy, Georgy.
Savoir-vivre feminin et faire-savoir colonial dans les recits de voyage feminins de l'entre-deux-guerres.
- Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2018 - 215 p.
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 80-07, Section: A.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Indiana University, 2018.
This item must not be added to any third party search indexes.
Situated at the intersection of travel literature studies, feminist theory, postcolonial studies and anthropology, my dissertation examines French women's travelogues in colonial Africa written in the interwar period. More specifically, I conceptualize the modes of participation of women writers in the production of discourses on French West Africa and describe the institutional frameworks within which they operated. While female-authored travelogues from the 19 th century have been vastly explored, and multiple studies have been published on British and American women travelers from the 20th century, critical scholarship has largely neglected the travel narratives of French women that are set in colonial Africa. As my research demonstrates, however, re-reading and contextualizing those texts has important theoretical implications for women's literary history, the study of colonial literature, and the field of travel studies more broadly. The discursive identity known as a coloniale, created by the promoters of the civilizing mission in the first quarter of the twentieth century, embodied an ideal of imperial citizenship for French women preparing to move overseas. At the same time, while the democratization of travel in the interwar years contributed to a more widespread acceptance of female mobility, representations of lived experience in travel accounts came to women authors with difficulty. Looking at French West Africa, a key site of France's mission civilisatrice , it becomes clear that French anthropologists and celebrated writers, as well as several African authors-all men-held a monopoly on textual representation of African space. The women who published travelogues based on their trips to French overseas possessions had to negotiate their place in the literary field among fluctuating discourses on colonial femininity. I demonstrate, however, that the authors succeeded in overcoming ideological concerns and explore the reasons for the marginalization of their travel accounts in literary history. I further show how they enriched the travel genre with new ways of engaging with geographic and cultural difference.
ISBN: 9780438781672Subjects--Topical Terms:
644020
French literature.
Savoir-vivre feminin et faire-savoir colonial dans les recits de voyage feminins de l'entre-deux-guerres.
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Situated at the intersection of travel literature studies, feminist theory, postcolonial studies and anthropology, my dissertation examines French women's travelogues in colonial Africa written in the interwar period. More specifically, I conceptualize the modes of participation of women writers in the production of discourses on French West Africa and describe the institutional frameworks within which they operated. While female-authored travelogues from the 19 th century have been vastly explored, and multiple studies have been published on British and American women travelers from the 20th century, critical scholarship has largely neglected the travel narratives of French women that are set in colonial Africa. As my research demonstrates, however, re-reading and contextualizing those texts has important theoretical implications for women's literary history, the study of colonial literature, and the field of travel studies more broadly. The discursive identity known as a coloniale, created by the promoters of the civilizing mission in the first quarter of the twentieth century, embodied an ideal of imperial citizenship for French women preparing to move overseas. At the same time, while the democratization of travel in the interwar years contributed to a more widespread acceptance of female mobility, representations of lived experience in travel accounts came to women authors with difficulty. Looking at French West Africa, a key site of France's mission civilisatrice , it becomes clear that French anthropologists and celebrated writers, as well as several African authors-all men-held a monopoly on textual representation of African space. The women who published travelogues based on their trips to French overseas possessions had to negotiate their place in the literary field among fluctuating discourses on colonial femininity. I demonstrate, however, that the authors succeeded in overcoming ideological concerns and explore the reasons for the marginalization of their travel accounts in literary history. I further show how they enriched the travel genre with new ways of engaging with geographic and cultural difference.
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http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=10982502
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