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CARACOL Conference

Call for papers

CARACOL Annual Conference 2022

In association with the Yesu Persaud Centre for Caribbean Studies

(University of 糖心TV)

 

鈥淐aribbean poetics: voices, aesthetics, imaginaries鈥

 

Organisers :

Orane ONYEKPE-TOUZET (University of 糖心TV/Sorbonne Universit茅)

Roc铆o MUNGUIA AGUILAR (Universit茅 de Strasbourg)

Dates : 06-07 May 2022

Modalit茅: On line

 

Deadline for abstracts : 06 February 2022

 

The notion of poetics first referring to a theory of artistic creation has taken on different meanings and has been used in various disciplines over the centuries, showing its versatility and its ability to reflect a wide range of voices, aesthetics and imaginaries. While in the 500 BC, Aristotle's thoughts focused on the question of Beauty and as such on the question of the craftsmanship or on the poet-craftsman鈥檚 process of making and purifying the 鈥渓ine鈥, new approaches focusing on the 鈥渟ign鈥 in creative works (M. Heidegger), or on its active rhetorical aspect and as its such poet(h)ic (P. Ricoeur) appeared, excavating the multiple potentiality of the notion.

In the Caribbean context, many thinkers gave the notion of poetics a geographical aspect where space and imaginary meet (K. Brathwaite, The Arrivants: A New World Trilogy: Rights of Passage, Islands, Masks, 1973 ; 脡. Glissant, 笔辞茅迟颈辩耻别 de la relation, 1990 ; 脡. Glissant, Introduction 脿 une po茅tique du divers, 1996 ; W. Harris, The Womb of Space, the Cross-Cultural Imagination, 1983 ; D. Maximin, Les Fruits du cyclone : une g茅opo茅tique de la Cara茂be, Paris, Seuil, 2006). The relationship between literature and world view appears to be particularly central and partly justifies how relevant this notion has proven to be. 脡douard Glissant for example, chooses the word poetics to replace that of philosophy as the latter has the tendency to refer to a western way of thinking within systems and leaves little space for diversity and unpredictability. He attempts to think without systems, through literature, poetry and the imaginary. Hence, the term poetics seems to offer the possibility of exploring how literary creation and understanding of the world intertwine. Because for Patrick Chamoiseau who builds on Glissant鈥檚 thoughts, 鈥淓crire en pays domin茅鈥 (Writing in a dominated land) also means 鈥渋nventing鈥 the world to free it/oneself.

Academics also explore these questions as they try to define the limits of a literary field which is as rich as linguistically and culturally diverse. The notion of poetics, often used in a comparatist approach, appears to be a fruitful tool of analysis in academic works but is rarely problematised in relation to the Caribbean space itself. At times associated with thinking the world through literature or literature in the world (Dash, 1994), at other times with a 鈥渃hamp d鈥檈xploration鈥 (鈥渇ield of exploration鈥, Duff, 2008), 鈥渕otifs鈥 (Monet-Descombey, 2017), a 鈥渟ph猫re鈥 (Boisseron, 2019), or a writer鈥檚 practice/aesthetic (R茅jouis, 2003), it appears that poetics is often thought of as a 鈥渇il conducteur鈥 (鈥渃ommon thread鈥, A茂ta, 2011) which aims at confronting different Caribbean expressions.

This conference proposes to question in an original way the fertility of the notion of poetics for our research into literary practices of Caribbean writers. We particularly encourage reflective works on the notion - the question of aesthetics, writer鈥檚 voices, imaginaries and itineraries can thus be explored. What is 鈥減oetics鈥 for Caribbean writers? How can a writer鈥檚 poetics be defined? Can we speak of Caribbean poetics? What is the relationship between poetics and politics in the Caribbean? Has the notion of poetics been used in the same way in academic research in French, English and Spanish? Abstracts may focus on writers of any of the linguistic areas of the Caribbean. They may explore the following aspects of the notion.

 

1- Poetic and Language

In the Caribbean the choice of languages is always meaningful. It often springs from an identity-based, ideological and aesthetical situation (in both meanings of the word) which outlines poetics (J. Bernab茅, P. Chamoiseau, R. Confiant, 1989). Thus, the unique way writers create their own language is part of defining poetics (脡. Glissant, 1981). Many Caribbean writers also question the ability of language to express reality and borrow their means of expressions to other art forms (E. Lovelace, 1979). We welcome presentations which question the role of language(s) in the construction of poetics as well as reflections on the limits of language, intermedial approaches and stylistic experimentations (N. Yassine-Diab, 2014). How important are linguistic choices and creations in the development of writers' poetics? Which languages for a Caribbean poetics? Is there a Caribbean poetics which would be defined by a specific relationship of writers to language? Does the variety of the Caribbean linguistic landscape prevent us from identifying a unified poetics?

 

2- Poetic and world view

If the word poetics points towards a world view which comes from a kind of invention, or to use Glissant鈥檚 word 鈥渋magination鈥, the literary text becomes the place where the relation to reality is recast (脡. Glissant, 1990). In short, we invite studies which focus on the attempts at reinventing the world that can be found in literary creations. It is also an invitation to question the proposals Caribbean creations make and bring them together in what we could call Caribbean poetics. Ways of thinking the world through and within literature which have had an important influence on Caribbean writers such as 鈥渞eal maravilloso鈥 (A.Carpentier, 1949), the 鈥渞茅alisme merveilleux鈥 ( J.S. Alexis, 1952) or magical realism can thus be explored. Academic attempts at formulating such Caribbean poetics such as 鈥減o茅tiques baroques鈥 (Chanc茅, 2001) or 鈥渢ranscaribbean poetics鈥 (R. R茅jouis, 2003) can also be examined. Which worldview exists within writers鈥 poetics? What is the impact of aesthetic on reinventing the world? How to think in literature? Which poetics to say the Caribbean world(s)? Why do Caribbean writers write?

 

3- Ecopoetics

In a world where the ecological crisis continues to intensify and the social stakes of climate change and natural catastrophes are evolving at a rapid pace, the ecopoetic approach expresses the urgency of exploring environmental questions in literature. In the Caribbean where nature appears as a full blown character (D. Maximin, 2006), or as a monument, trace-witness part of an organic memory (脡. Glissant, 1980), environmental consciousness present in texts often reflects diverse ethical, political and aesthetic choices. We thus invite abstracts which question the characteristics of a specifically Caribbean ecopoetics and the way both poetics and ecology interact with each other in that space. Which literary practices echo those complex environmental concerns in their multiple dimensions and scales? How does one make the historically imposed space one鈥檚 own and reveal the political stakes and potentiality of texts? How do writers invite a rethinking of ecologies from the Caribbean world and even demand, more or less explicitly, an active 鈥渄ecolonial ecology鈥 (M. Ferdinand, 2019)? A reflection on the relationship between the representation of nature (in a wide sense) and the nature of writing is encouraged here.

4- Female Poetics

Long marked by the 鈥減resence-absence鈥 of women in literature - erased from the field, made to appear present, represented ambiguously or stereotypically in texts (Kalisa, 2009) -, the Caribbean space now has a solid genealogy of female writers in all genres, languages and cultures. While the female novelists of the so-called 鈥渇irst generation鈥 in the Francophone space (principally Mich猫le Lacrosil and Jacqueline Manicom) illustrate a writing tendency which reacts to the works of founding male figures, we note a progressive liberation of creative processes which often although not always meet around identity quests related to being a woman in the Caribbean. We welcome reflections on aesthetic voices, thematic choices and ethical ambitions which lead these quests and point towards a female poetics in the Caribbean. Can we detect within the voices, gestures and postures of women (writers and/or characters) a specific faculty when it comes to shedding light on parts of the Caribbean world, on its reality and its history? What are the potentialities and/or the limits of a gendered approach to fictional texts in this space? Far from seeing literary activities in an antagonistic perspective placing men and women on two opposite sides, this part of the call is the space to bring together the said 鈥渇emale鈥 representations (offered by female writers) and the representation of females (offered by male writers) in order to discover common points and differences in imaginaries.

 

Please send abstracts in French, English or Spanish of 300 to 500 words as well as a short biography to Roc铆o Mungu铆a rocio.munguia.a@gmail.com and Orane Onyekpe-Touzet orane.touzet@warwick.ac.uk before 6th Febraury 2022.

 

Scientific committee:

Florian Alix (Sorbonne Universit茅)

Pierre-Philippe Fraiture (University of 糖心TV)

John Gilmore (University of 糖心TV)

Roc铆o Mungu铆a Aguilar (Universit茅 de Strasbourg)

Maeve McCusker (Queen鈥檚 University Belfast)

Orane Onyekpe-Touzet (University of 糖心TV/ Sorbonne Universit茅)

Fabienne Viala (University of 糖心TV)

 

Bibliographie / Bibliography/ Bibiograf铆a

A茂ta Mariella, 芦 Vers une po茅tique litt茅raire de la Cara茂be : de Carpentier 脿 Simone Schwarz-Bart 禄, SynergiesVenezuela, no 6, 2011, p. 11-22.

Amy de la Bret猫que Pauline, Vers une po茅tique f茅minine de la cr茅olisation : une pens茅e carib茅enne et diasporique de la litt茅rature de Jean Rhys, Paule Marshall, Michelle Cliff, Olive Senior et Jamaica Kincaid, th猫se, 2020.

Aristote, 笔辞茅迟颈辩耻别, Paris, Les Belles lettres, 1932. Texte 茅tabli et traduit par Jean Hardy.

B茅nac-Giroux Karine, 笔辞茅迟颈辩耻别 et Politique de l鈥檃lt茅rit茅: colonialisme, esclavagisme, exotisme (XVIIIe-XXIe&苍产蝉辫;蝉颈猫肠濒别蝉), Paris, Garnier, 2019.

Boisseron Monique, Regards crois茅s, Vision du Noir et expression po茅tique dans la Cara茂be hispanophone du XIXe et du d茅but du XXe&苍产蝉辫;蝉颈猫肠濒别, Paris, Garnier, 2019.

Brathwaite Kamau, The Arrivants: A New World Trilogy: Rights of Passage, Islands, Masks, Oxford, Oxford UP, 1973.

Chamoiseau Patrick, 脡crire en pays domin茅, Paris, Gallimard, coll. 芦 Folio 禄, 1997.

Chanc茅 Dominique, 笔辞茅迟颈辩耻别 baroque de la Cara茂be, Paris, Karthala, 2001.

Dash J. Michael, 鈥淭extual Error and Cultural Crossing: A Caribbean Poetics of Creolization鈥, , Research in African Literatures, , p. 159-168.

Duff Christine, Univers intimes: pour une po茅tique de l鈥檌nt茅riorit茅 au f茅minin dans la litt茅rature carib茅enne, NewYork-Washington D.C.-Bern-Berlin, Peter Lang, 2008.

Flores-Rodriguez , Towards a trans-Caribbean poetics: A new aesthetics of power and resistance, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Thesis, 2011.

Giroux Laurent, 芦 脡l茅ments d鈥檜n art po茅tique national : Heidegger 禄, Laval th茅ologique et philosophique, vol. 52, no 1, 1996, p. 125.

Glissant 脡douard, Introduction 脿 une po茅tique du divers, Paris, Gallimard, 1996.

Glissant 脡douard, 笔辞茅迟颈辩耻别 de la relation, Paris, Gallimard, 1990.

Harris Wilson, The Womb of Space, the Cross-Cultural Imagination, Greenwood Press, 1983.

Maximin Daniel, Les Fruits du cyclone : une g茅opo茅tique de la Cara茂be, Paris, Seuil, 2006.

Monet-Desombey Hernandez Sandra, 芦 笔辞茅迟颈辩耻别s m茅morielles et imaginaire collectif : canne 脿 sucre et 茅mancipation en Cara茂be 禄, Canne 脿 sucre en Cara茂be H茅ritages et recompositionsCaravelle, no 109, 2017, p. 45-62.

Morejon Nancy, 鈥淭oward a Poetics of the Caribbean鈥,  ; Norman, Okla.,2002, p. 52-53.

Torres-Saillant Silvio A., Caribbean poetics: Aesthetics of marginality in West Indian literature, thesis, 1991.

R茅jouis Rose-Myriam, 鈥淐aribbean Writers and Language: The Autobiographical Poetics of Jamaica Kincaid and Patrick Chamoiseau鈥, A Gathering in Honor of Jules ChametzkyThe Massachusetts Review, Vol. 44, No. 1/2,, 2003, p. 213-232.

Ric艙ur Paul, Du texte 脿 l鈥檃ction: essais d鈥檋erm茅neutique II, Paris, Seuil, 1986.

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