Article (Scientific journals)
Not at Home in the World: Abject Mobilities in Marie NDiaye’s Trois femmes puissantes and NoViolet Bulawayo’s We Need New Names
Toivanen, Anna-Leena
2015In Postcolonial Text, 10 (1), p. 1-18
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Keywords :
Abjection; African literature; Cosmopolitanism; Mobility; NoViolet Bulawayo; Marie NDiaye
Abstract :
[en] The theme of mobility recurs frequently in the works of third-generation novelists. This article focuses on two recent Africa-affiliated novels, namely We Need New Names by NoViolet Bulawayo and Trois femmes puissantes by Marie NDiaye. While these two texts employ very different narrative and stylistic means, they both explore the thematic of mobility with pronouncedly abject connotations. In Bulawayo’s novel, abjection is the condition of the crisis-ridden postcolonial nation-state and it also marks the characters associated with this abject context through national affiliation. NDiaye’s approach to abjection focuses on the psychological and the private, but the roots of abjection in her novel can be traced back to the multivalent aftermath of the colonial enterprise in Africa and the contemporary mobilities it has generated. Both novels draw attention to the complex reasons behind abject African mobilities and why they become defined as such in the first place.
Disciplines :
Literature
Author, co-author :
Toivanen, Anna-Leena ;  Université de Liège > Département de langues et littératures modernes > Littérature anglaise moderne et littérature américaine
Language :
English
Title :
Not at Home in the World: Abject Mobilities in Marie NDiaye’s Trois femmes puissantes and NoViolet Bulawayo’s We Need New Names
Publication date :
2015
Journal title :
Postcolonial Text
ISSN :
1705-9100
Publisher :
Kwantlen University College. Department of English, Surrey, Canada
Volume :
10
Issue :
1
Pages :
1-18
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Available on ORBi :
since 25 April 2017

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