克拉马特沙龙

T. Sharpley-Whiting
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇文章探讨了纳尔达尔姐妹的文学作品和二十世纪的文学沙龙,作为关于多层身份的辩论的起点,即法国性,与法国记忆和历史纪念场所,黑人历史和法国沙龙的历史相对立。它探讨了法国人的身份、排斥和挪用、性别、同化和政治文化等问题,因为它们与克拉马尔沙龙的对话和主持人的著作有关。弗朗茨·法农著名的《看一个黑人!》在Paulette Nardal的一篇短篇小说中发现了它的先驱强调了将sœurs Nardal定位到黑人法国悠久而丰富的历史中的必要性,同时也将沙龙置于当时大西洋黑人世界中出现的更广泛的种族意识中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Clamart Salon
This essay explores the Nardal sisters’ literary output and the twentieth-century literary salon as ground zero for debates about the multi-layered identity that is Frenchness, over and against French memory and sites of historical memorialization, histories of Negritude, and the history of French salons. It examines questions of French identity, exclusion and appropriation, gender, assimilation, and political culture as they relate to conversations at the Clamart salon and the writings of its hosts. The contrast between Frantz Fanon’s famous ‘Look a Negro!’ and its precursor found in a Paulette Nardal short story highlights the need to locate the sœurs Nardal into the long and rich history of Black France, but also to situate the salon in the broader ethos of race consciousness emergent in the Black Atlantic world of its time.
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