Record Details

Loin du monde, l’île est le monde : Les écotones insulaires de l’océan Indien entre créolisation et frontières liquides

Literator

 
 
Field Value
 
Title Loin du monde, l’île est le monde : Les écotones insulaires de l’océan Indien entre créolisation et frontières liquides
 
Creator Arnold, Markus
 
Subject — Indian ocean; island; literature; Mauritius; ecotone; creolisation; postcolonial
Description Far from the world, the island is the world: The island ecotones of the Indian Ocean between creolisation and liquid borders. Due to their specific geography and plural histories, the island societies of the south-western Indian Ocean are characterised by a considerable anthropological and cultural complexity. Colonial regimes and migratory and diasporic phenomena have strongly marked these territories on the oceanic borders as well as their social construction and particular ethno-racial composition. Island-as-utopia, island-as-prison, island-as-refuge, island-as-stopover, island-as-relation, island-as-world … there is no shortage of notions to imagine and describe these heterogeneous places where the realities, potentialities, and limits of (post)colonial cultural plurality are negotiated. For behind the tropical dreams and the exaltations of harmonious cohabitation (vivre-ensemble) appear the precariousness of the island condition, the ambiguity of identity, and the difficulty of anchoring oneself in and expressing oneself from a place which continues to be significantly shaped by its relations with the outside (the old and new ‘metropolises’ and places of reference, other islands). To what extent can the specificities of the Indian Ocean islands – this other ‘archipelago’ less visible than its Caribbean counterpart – inform and nourish continental territories, France, the world? Are they models of ethical solidarity? Antidotes to identity-based blockages? Laboratories of democratic thought? Creative prefigurations of the future? It may well be. However, according to certain thinkers, writers and artists from these spaces, the islands and archipelagos – far from being the idealisations of a vitalist and blissful community (en-commun) – prove to be above all plural and conflicting contact zones. They emerge as complex ecotones that allow us to imagine and think about the challenges of our contemporary societies and cultures from the ‘margins’, the interstices, the unstable borders.
 
Publisher AOSIS
 
Contributor
Date 2022-10-26
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion — Literary Analysis —
Format text/html application/epub+zip text/xml application/pdf
Identifier 10.4102/lit.v43i1.1901
 
Source Literator; Vol 43, No 1 (2022); 12 pages Literator; Vol 43, No 1 (2022); 12 pages 2219-8237 0258-2279
 
Language eng
 
Relation
The following web links (URLs) may trigger a file download or direct you to an alternative webpage to gain access to a publication file format of the published article:

https://literator.org.za/index.php/literator/article/view/1901/3676 https://literator.org.za/index.php/literator/article/view/1901/3677 https://literator.org.za/index.php/literator/article/view/1901/3678 https://literator.org.za/index.php/literator/article/view/1901/3679
 
Coverage — — —
Rights Copyright (c) 2022 Markus Arnold https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
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