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Yale French Studies, Number 147
Yale French Studies, Number 147
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€72.99
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Brent Hayes Edwards
Caribbean literature
Category=CJ
Category=DS
Charly Verstraet
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eq_dictionaries-language-reference
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Francophone Caribbean
French media studies
Lorna Milne
Maeve McCusker
Manuel Norvat
Nick Nesbitt
Patrick Chamoiseau
Samia Kassab-Charfi
Thomas Trezise
Usha Rungoo
Vale'rie Loichot
Product details
- ISBN 9780300280845
- Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
- Publication Date: 20 Jan 2026
- Publisher: Yale University Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
An examination of interrelatedness, influence, and intention in the works of Martinican writer Patrick Chamoiseau
In this issue of Yale French Studies, editors Thomas Trezise and Charly Verstraet assemble essays exploring the work of Martinican writer Patrick Chamoiseau. As a public intellectual concerned with affairs both local and global, Chamoiseau has crafted a body of work that reaches beyond the traditional borders of the Caribbean while maintaining the interrelatedness of the islands with the rest of the world. Contributors to the volume, including Chamoiseau himself, examine his novels, memoirs, poetics, and depictions of trauma, darkness, animals, and more to reveal the way his words cannot be contained within traditional boundaries (literary, political, or cultural). The collection touches on Chamoiseau’s techniques of borrowing, mixing, and subverting European literary genres; his implicit or explicit dialogue with other writers; his engagement with different media; and the connections he draws between historical trauma and natural disaster.
In this issue of Yale French Studies, editors Thomas Trezise and Charly Verstraet assemble essays exploring the work of Martinican writer Patrick Chamoiseau. As a public intellectual concerned with affairs both local and global, Chamoiseau has crafted a body of work that reaches beyond the traditional borders of the Caribbean while maintaining the interrelatedness of the islands with the rest of the world. Contributors to the volume, including Chamoiseau himself, examine his novels, memoirs, poetics, and depictions of trauma, darkness, animals, and more to reveal the way his words cannot be contained within traditional boundaries (literary, political, or cultural). The collection touches on Chamoiseau’s techniques of borrowing, mixing, and subverting European literary genres; his implicit or explicit dialogue with other writers; his engagement with different media; and the connections he draws between historical trauma and natural disaster.
Thomas Trezise is professor of French at Princeton University. He is the author of Witnessing Witnessing: On the Reception of Holocaust Survivor Testimony and Into the Breach: Samuel Beckett and the Ends of Literature, and editor of Yale French Studies, Number 104: Encounters with Levinas. He lives in Thetford, VT, and Princeton, NJ. Charly Verstraet is assistant professor of world languages and cultures at American University. He has published a translation of Patrick Chamoiseau’s Crusoe’s Footprint. He lives in Bethesda, MD.
Yale French Studies, Number 147
€72.99
