1 |
Auteur(s):
Pierre KRAMOKO.
N° Page : 245-259
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THE HOMELESS HOUSEHOLD: A REFLECTION ON THE FAMILY IN TONI MORRISON’S SULA AND SONG OF SOLOMON
Résumé de l'article
Black American families are intertwined by the vestige of slavery that emasculated the black
slave, subsequently giving the black woman the position of family leader. Concentrating on
Toni Morrison’s Sula and Song of Solomon, this article proposes a re-evaluation of black
feminism. The objective is to analyze such families in which the fathering woman’s role is
one of the hegemonic. But it appears that despite her sense of sacrifice, she fails to play two
roles, that of the mother and the one of the father who is absent. The emotional instability of
most characters in the two fictions reads, therefore, as a result of the unstable family circle
that presents the image of an open circle. That is how, the discussion suggests moving from
the community of women to the construction of black American families where the mother
and the father constitute the two pillars of their stability.
2 |
Auteur(s):
Désiré Yssa KOFFI.
N° Page : 260-273
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THE VOICE IN THE PERIPHERY: BLACK CULTURE IN TONI MORRISON’S TAR BABY
Résumé de l'article
Although the slavery system in America was founded on the negation of Blacks’ cultural
values brought from Africa, Toni Morrison shows in Tar Baby that analyzing black culture
differently leads to a conflict between white and black race. White people denied any culture
in the process of the Blacks’ dehumanization. Whites destroyed black culture and imposed
them theirs. Blacks meanwhile, revived cultural values of the black race to show Whites that
they had an advanced culture that gave meaning to their existence and identity. They highlight
the importance of their culture that contributes to their integration into the fabric of the society
in The United States of America.
3 |
Auteur(s):
Minata KONE.
N° Page : 273-285
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The NGURARIO or Marriage in Fiction and Real Life
Résumé de l'article
This paper analyses the NGURARIO or marriage ceremony in fiction and real life. We
will study Ngugi’s I Will Marry When I Want, a subversive book and Manthia Diawara's
documentary film Who Is Afraid of Ngugi? The first text is the English version of Ngaahika
Ndeenda, a play in kikuyu, critical of the regime and performed by peasants and workers. The
film is showing how Ngugi was crowned on his return in 2002 to Kenya despite the tragedy that
results in his return. The two texts include the performance of the Ngurario, the final step in a
marriage ceremony. The film echoes cultural pessimism raised by the play.
4 |
Auteur(s):
Daouda COULIBALY.
N° Page : 286-298
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THE DRAMATIZATION OF THE FEMALE BODY: DISCOURSES OF RESISTANCE AND POWER IN OF EVE ENSLER’S THE VAGINA MONOLOGUES
Résumé de l'article
Eve Ensler’s The Vagina Monologues (TVM) is an atypical play that centers on the
most intimate part of the female anatomy: her vagina. This paper analyzes the double play of
“jouissance” as the site of pleasure and resistance through the body and words. As a hearing
and sharing of women’s experiences with one another, Ensler’s play delineates a new
aesthetic grounded in the performance of individual and collective stories through the
mediation of their voices/bodies. This paper analyzes the dramatization of the female body as
site of resistance and power.