This special issue of the journal focuses on women’s artistic productions that retain traces of French colonization. The gaze is thus widened towards other seas and other continents, notably Africa and Asia. The sea, once crossed by colonizers and slave traders and today crisscrossed by migrants, is the space crossed by a very dense “world-border” that the female writers, artists, and intellectuals of multiple origins whose works are analyzed here explore, using French as the language of their creation.

Writing within the “World-Border”

Ferraro A.
2022-01-01

Abstract

This special issue of the journal focuses on women’s artistic productions that retain traces of French colonization. The gaze is thus widened towards other seas and other continents, notably Africa and Asia. The sea, once crossed by colonizers and slave traders and today crisscrossed by migrants, is the space crossed by a very dense “world-border” that the female writers, artists, and intellectuals of multiple origins whose works are analyzed here explore, using French as the language of their creation.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11390/1302916
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