Animisms. From Africa to First Nations, thinking decolonization with the writers

This thesis proposes a comparative reflection between the literatures of the First Nations of Quebec and those of sub-Saharan Africa and Afro-descendants and more specifically the poetry of Natasha Kanapé Fontaine, Rita Mestokosho and Josephine Bacon, as well as some of the novels of Léonora Miano a...

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Main Author: Lefilleul, Alice
Other Authors: Sorbonne Paris Cité, Université du Québec à Montréal, Garnier, Xavier, Harel, Simon
Format: Thesis
Language:French
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.theses.fr/2018USPCA046/document
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:10670/1.gdoj0f 2023-05-15T16:15:50+02:00 Animisms. From Africa to First Nations, thinking decolonization with the writers Animismes. De l'Afrique aux Premières Nations, penser la décolonisation avec les écrivains Lefilleul, Alice Sorbonne Paris Cité Université du Québec à Montréal Garnier, Xavier Harel, Simon 2018-04-13 http://www.theses.fr/2018USPCA046/document fr fre 10670/1.gdoj0f http://www.theses.fr/2018USPCA046/document other Theses.fr Afrique Premières Nations Innu Animisme Littérature Comparée Décolonisation Léonora Miano Sami Tchak Rita Mestokosho Joséphine Bacon Natasha Kanapé Fontaine Épistémologie Poétique relationnelle Africa First Nations Animism Comparative literature Decolonization Epistemology Territory Dream Relational poetics litt hisphilso Thesis https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_46ec/ 2018 fttriple 2023-01-22T16:38:57Z This thesis proposes a comparative reflection between the literatures of the First Nations of Quebec and those of sub-Saharan Africa and Afro-descendants and more specifically the poetry of Natasha Kanapé Fontaine, Rita Mestokosho and Josephine Bacon, as well as some of the novels of Léonora Miano and Sami Tchak. The texts of these Innu, Franco-Cameroonian and Togolese poets and writers are based on the notion of animism. By means of literary referents, anthropological studies and Aboriginal studies, this work therefore questions the presence of animism in the practice of writing and questions its decolonial scope. This reflection is also built from fieldworks, by taking into account the promotion of the experiential knowledge advocated by Aboriginal studies. Building on what the researcher Renate Eigenbrod calls "narrative scholarship", namely the alternation between theory and narration, this thesis aims to think of the animist way of being in the world as an epistemology.Through a two-step thought, this work highlights the different effects of colonization on animism as a way of being in the world, as well as its decolonial dynamics through the prism of their literary representation and incarnation. The first chapter analyzes the objectification strategies of animism carried by the colonial policies. The second chapter focuses on the salient characteristics of the literary representation of animism. The question of the relation to the territory and the its inherent notion of sovereignty are discussed in chapter three. Unlike the mechanics of assignment and oppression, our aim is then to reflect on the dynamics of emancipation carried by animism within the texts of our corpus. Chapter four analyzes issues related to the notion of Subject from a decolonial perspective. Then, this is the resistant potentiality of animism as relational ontology which is questioned in chapter five. Finally, chapter six theorizes its practical dimension and its constitution as a resurgence, against contemporary colonialism. The ... Thesis First Nations Premières Nations sami Unknown Josephine ENVELOPE(-152.800,-152.800,-77.550,-77.550)
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language French
topic Afrique
Premières Nations
Innu
Animisme
Littérature Comparée
Décolonisation
Léonora Miano
Sami Tchak
Rita Mestokosho
Joséphine Bacon
Natasha Kanapé Fontaine
Épistémologie
Poétique relationnelle
Africa
First Nations
Animism
Comparative literature
Decolonization
Epistemology
Territory
Dream
Relational poetics
litt
hisphilso
spellingShingle Afrique
Premières Nations
Innu
Animisme
Littérature Comparée
Décolonisation
Léonora Miano
Sami Tchak
Rita Mestokosho
Joséphine Bacon
Natasha Kanapé Fontaine
Épistémologie
Poétique relationnelle
Africa
First Nations
Animism
Comparative literature
Decolonization
Epistemology
Territory
Dream
Relational poetics
litt
hisphilso
Lefilleul, Alice
Animisms. From Africa to First Nations, thinking decolonization with the writers
topic_facet Afrique
Premières Nations
Innu
Animisme
Littérature Comparée
Décolonisation
Léonora Miano
Sami Tchak
Rita Mestokosho
Joséphine Bacon
Natasha Kanapé Fontaine
Épistémologie
Poétique relationnelle
Africa
First Nations
Animism
Comparative literature
Decolonization
Epistemology
Territory
Dream
Relational poetics
litt
hisphilso
description This thesis proposes a comparative reflection between the literatures of the First Nations of Quebec and those of sub-Saharan Africa and Afro-descendants and more specifically the poetry of Natasha Kanapé Fontaine, Rita Mestokosho and Josephine Bacon, as well as some of the novels of Léonora Miano and Sami Tchak. The texts of these Innu, Franco-Cameroonian and Togolese poets and writers are based on the notion of animism. By means of literary referents, anthropological studies and Aboriginal studies, this work therefore questions the presence of animism in the practice of writing and questions its decolonial scope. This reflection is also built from fieldworks, by taking into account the promotion of the experiential knowledge advocated by Aboriginal studies. Building on what the researcher Renate Eigenbrod calls "narrative scholarship", namely the alternation between theory and narration, this thesis aims to think of the animist way of being in the world as an epistemology.Through a two-step thought, this work highlights the different effects of colonization on animism as a way of being in the world, as well as its decolonial dynamics through the prism of their literary representation and incarnation. The first chapter analyzes the objectification strategies of animism carried by the colonial policies. The second chapter focuses on the salient characteristics of the literary representation of animism. The question of the relation to the territory and the its inherent notion of sovereignty are discussed in chapter three. Unlike the mechanics of assignment and oppression, our aim is then to reflect on the dynamics of emancipation carried by animism within the texts of our corpus. Chapter four analyzes issues related to the notion of Subject from a decolonial perspective. Then, this is the resistant potentiality of animism as relational ontology which is questioned in chapter five. Finally, chapter six theorizes its practical dimension and its constitution as a resurgence, against contemporary colonialism. The ...
author2 Sorbonne Paris Cité
Université du Québec à Montréal
Garnier, Xavier
Harel, Simon
format Thesis
author Lefilleul, Alice
author_facet Lefilleul, Alice
author_sort Lefilleul, Alice
title Animisms. From Africa to First Nations, thinking decolonization with the writers
title_short Animisms. From Africa to First Nations, thinking decolonization with the writers
title_full Animisms. From Africa to First Nations, thinking decolonization with the writers
title_fullStr Animisms. From Africa to First Nations, thinking decolonization with the writers
title_full_unstemmed Animisms. From Africa to First Nations, thinking decolonization with the writers
title_sort animisms. from africa to first nations, thinking decolonization with the writers
publishDate 2018
url http://www.theses.fr/2018USPCA046/document
long_lat ENVELOPE(-152.800,-152.800,-77.550,-77.550)
geographic Josephine
geographic_facet Josephine
genre First Nations
Premières Nations
sami
genre_facet First Nations
Premières Nations
sami
op_source Theses.fr
op_relation 10670/1.gdoj0f
http://www.theses.fr/2018USPCA046/document
op_rights other
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