Fr. 256.00

Ethics of Description - The Anthropological Dispositif and French Modern Travel Writing

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 1 to 3 weeks (not available at short notice)

Description

Read more

Ethics of Description: The Anthropological Dispositif and French Modern Travel Writing follows the development of a minor tradition in French literature where metropolitan authors traveling abroad demonstrate their awareness of the ethical conundrums of representing world peoples. During the colonial-modern era, currents of anthropological thought and representational practice are identifiable throughout society, and across literature, the arts, and the sciences. Collectively, they can be theorized as belonging to a dispositif, the anthropological dispositif. The modernization of anthropology serves as an ambivalent interlocutor for the realizations of the writers studied in this book about the difficulties of describing cultural realities that lie largely outside their ken. Anthropology motivates new literary representational strategies that are, alternatively, in keeping with scientific mandates or operate against them. Forty images are analyzed alongside literary works. A postcolonial chapter shows how the ethical awareness of the colonial-modern authors studied have impacted minority self-representation in contemporary France.

List of contents

Acknowledgments

List of Figures

Introduction

Interchapter 1: Cordier and Fromentin: A Case Study of Ethnographic Art

1.  Ethnographic Aesthetics: An Order of Subjects Called the Document
Interchapter 2: The Arche-Principle in Turn-of-the-Century Anthropological Images

2. Segalen's Arche-Writing

Interchapter 3: Visual Memory in the Dispositif

3. The Paradox of Description: The Tableau and the Note in André Gide and Marc Allégret's French Equatorial Africa

Interchapter 4: Double Exposure: Photojournalism in 1930s Ethiopia

4. Information Ethics in L'Afrique fantôme

Interchapter 5: Travel in Rachid Djaïdani's Film Sur ma ligne [On My Line] (2006)

Chapter 5: French Minority Writers and Polyvocal Auto-Ethnography in Métisse France

Index

About the author

Matt Reeck is a Guggenheim Fellow in Translation. Having completed his PhD in the Comparative Literature Department at UCLA, he is currently an Adjunct Professor of French and Francophone Studies at St. John’s University.

Summary

It follows the development of a minor tradition where French metropolitan authors traveling abroad who are aware of the ethical conundrums of representing world peoples & shows how the ethical awareness of the colonial-modern authors have impacted minority self-representation in France

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.