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Islands, Theory and the Postcolonial Environment: Reading the Work of Khal Torabully

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Author(s):
Brugioni, Elena ; Fendler, Ute
Total Authors: 2
Document type: Journal article
Source: PORTUGUESE STUDIES; v. 37, n. 2, p. 15-pg., 2021-01-01.
Abstract

Considering the scholarship developed within the research projects NILUS (FCT, Ref. PTDC/CPCELT/4868/2014) and Indian Ocean Aesthetic (FAPESP grant 2016/26098-5), both in the field of Indian Ocean Studies, this article aims to address the concepts of island and insularity as strategic frameworks for (re)thinking discourses on identity within a postcolonial critical and theoretical perspective. Based on the theorization proposed by Mauritian poet Khal Torabully, namely the concepts of coolitude and identite corail (Carter & Torabully, 2002), the article presents an overview of the relationship between those two concepts and the better-known notions of negritude and creolite. The discussion presented aims to trace out new critical pathways with a view to reframing postcolonial critical discourses on identity and hybridity within the specific cultural and material context of oceanic studies, and of what has come to be defined as the postcolonial environment. (AU)

FAPESP's process: 20/07836-0 - Combined and uneven comparisons: rethinking the fields of african and postcolonial literary studies within the debate on world-literature
Grantee:Elena Brugioni
Support Opportunities: Regular Research Grants