Language:
FR
| Published:
30-06-2025
|
Abstract
| pp. 1-10
The “ensauvagement” – a term coined by Voldřichová Beránková (2021) – that characterizes the ongoing transformation of Quebec literature due to both the intense interest of certain authors in Amerindian topics and the gradual assertiveness of Amerindian authors themselves can be traced back as far the earliest writings of the Nouvelle-France period (Marc Lescarbot, Relations des jésuites, etc.). “Savage” characters were appropriated by 19th- and 20th-century literature as identity figures, authenticating Quebec’s identity. Works by Antoine Gérin-Lajoie (Le Jeune Latour, 1844), Louis-Honoré Fréchette (Papineau, 1880), Jacques Ferron (Les Grands Soleils, 1958; Le Ciel de Québec, 1969) and Leonard Cohen (Beautiful Losers, 1967) follow this increasingly important thematic thread. The paper attempts to link this progression of aboriginal resurgences to the activation of identity models (Bouchard, 2001) over the history of literature, and to the transformation of poetics that converts Amerindians from secondary and minor figures into complex characters on the way to “ensauvagement” of Quebec literature.
Language:
FR
| Published:
30-06-2025
|
Abstract
| pp. 1-23
This study examines the representation of the Afro-Polish subject in the literary works of Emmanuel Dongala and Rita Dove, with a focus on ontological identification and the humanistic conception of the subject. These two notions serve as analytical frameworks for exploring the portrayal of the Afro- Polish figure in Dongala’s novel, La Sonate à Bridgetower: Sonata Mulattica (2017), where Bridgetower’s journey becomes a lens through which questions of freedom are interrogated. Simultaneously, Dove’s poetry collection, Sonata Mulattica (2009), underscores the themes of hope and the liberating power of music in Bridgetower’s life, expanding the discourse to a broader European context, encompassing England and France. In both narratives, Bridgetower emerges as a unique embodiment of Afro-Polish humanism in 18th-century Europe, while also highlighting contemporary issues of racial discrimination and the struggle for social acceptance.
Language:
IT
| Published:
30-06-2025
|
Abstract
| pp. 1-12
The article discusses selected short stories from Michele Mari’s latest collection, Le maestose rovine di Sferopoli [The Majestic Ruins of Sferopolis], published in 2021. This fourth anthology in Mari’s oeuvre includes both new narratives as well as those previously published in newspapers or other short story collections. A unifying theme across these diverse stories – varied in form, language, and subject matter – is the exploration of imagination and linguistic creativity. The short stories invite a deeper, meta-literary reflection on the mechanisms of narration and expression through artistic text, on challenging established literary canons, on expressionistic compositional oxymoronization, and on influencing how the work is received by drawing on the cultural traditions shared with the recipient.
Language:
ES
| Published:
30-06-2025
|
Abstract
| pp. 1-11
In this paper, geopoetics constitutes a starting point for the exploration of Raúl Zurita’s monumental project entitled La vida nueva. Versión final that was written over the years 1983–2019. The aim of the paper is to demonstrate how the work of the Chilean poet aligns with the paradigm shift in thinking about the relationship between the man and the environment, as observed among researchers by the end of the 20th century. Moreover, the paper draws on the theoretical reflection and literary practice of the founder of geopoetics, namely Kenneth White, to present the main assumptions of this research orientation that represents the environmental humanities. Next, selected aspects of Zurita’s collection of poems are analysed. Those aspects illustrate him as an intellectual committed to the present and future of nature in southern Chile.