Doctoral thesis (Dissertations and theses)
Creative Spatializations: New Cartographies in Contemporary Black Canadian Fiction
Mergeai, Mathilde
2013
 

Files


Full Text
PhD Mergeai Orbi.pdf
Author preprint (137.16 kB)
Request a copy

All documents in ORBi are protected by a user license.

Send to



Details



Keywords :
Canada; Canadian Multiculturalism; Dionne Brand; David Chariandy; Lawrence Hill; Literary Cartographies; Black Geographies; Black Atlantic; Black Diaspora
Abstract :
[en] My dissertation explores the ways in which contemporary black Canadian novels rewrite national space by integrating into it what might be called past and present black spatialities. Regardless of its official policy of multiculturalism, Canada appears unable to reflect the diversity of its population, one of the most multi-ethnic in the world, which results in the social and spatial exclusion of minorities—whose presence is perpetually construed as ‘recent’—from the dominant national narratives. Starting from Henri Lefebvre’s assertion that “[a] social transformation, to be truly revolutionary in character, must manifest a creative capacity in its effects on daily life, on language and on space” (54), and from the conceptualization of fictional literature as both a product and a producer of geographical creativities, this work considers the literary respatializations of black Canada in five recent novels, At the Full and Change of the Moon (1999) and What We All Long For (2005) by Dionne Brand, Any Known Blood (1997) and The Book of Negroes (2007) by Lawrence Hill, and Soucouyant (2007) by David Chariandy. I specifically examine four topographies through which these writers relate ‘blackness’ to ‘Canadianness,’ namely, the ocean, the city, the rural suburb, and the home space. More specifically, this dissertation illuminates how these literary representations of Canadian space locate this nation within the paradigmatic locations of black history but also show how the country’s social and geographical landscape is marked by the black history that took place in the country itself. Through a multidisciplinary approach which looks at theorizations of space emanating from literary, geographical, and sociological fields of study, I examine how these writers shift the terms of Canadian identity by disrupting the founding narratives of the nation which rely on the country’s wild landscapes and construct Canada as a white-only space. Finally, this dissertation engages with racialized bodies whose interconnectedness with both physical and imaginary spaces allow for a multiplicity of creative spatializations to emerge.
Research center :
CEREP - Centre d'Enseignement et de Recherche en Études Postcoloniales - ULiège
Disciplines :
Literature
Author, co-author :
Mergeai, Mathilde ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département des langues et littératures modernes > Langue et linguistique anglaises modernes
Language :
English
Title :
Creative Spatializations: New Cartographies in Contemporary Black Canadian Fiction
Defense date :
15 February 2013
Number of pages :
317
Institution :
ULiège - Université de Liège
Degree :
Docteur en Langues et Lettres
Promotor :
Ledent, Bénédicte  ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département de langues modernes : linguistique, littérature et traduction
President :
Cuder-Domínguez, Pilar
Secretary :
Pagnoulle, Christine  ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département de langues modernes : linguistique, littérature et traduction
Jury member :
Martín-Lucas, Belén
Noxolo, Pat
Available on ORBi :
since 31 January 2013

Statistics


Number of views
227 (54 by ULiège)
Number of downloads
16 (16 by ULiège)

Bibliography


Similar publications



Contact ORBi