College Bulletin 2024-2025 
    
    Nov 21, 2024  
College Bulletin 2024-2025

FREN 045F. La représentation /mémoire/ écopoétique de la plantation


Excessive human activity has been the dominant influence on the climate and the  environmental conditions that we are experiencing across the globe. Colonialism  (neocolonialism), capitalism, and racial/ethnic hierarchies will be at the center of our  critique by asking what past and future modes of resistance might emerge to aid us in  navigating our current impasse. This seminar engages with contemporary literature by  francophone writers, poets, theorists, and artists who creatively reflect on the ways in  which rising sea levels, deforestation, excessive oil drilling practices, and extreme shifting  weather conditions occur in the wake of a string of relational ecological disasters. Topics  included in this course range from the memory and afterlives of slavery on the  postplantation to the aesthetics of ecological catastrophes (and renewal) represented through the emergence of a poetry and poetics that take an ecological stance toward the  world. Selected works by Édouard Glissant, Maryse Condé, Patrick Chamoiseau, Simone  Schwarz-Bart, Edwidge Danticat, Françoise Vergès, Yanick Lahens, Dany Laferrière, and  Louis-Philippe Dalembert among others will be considered in this meditation on the  Anthropocene/ Plantationocene. Course will be conducted in French.
Humanities.
1 credit.
Spring 2025. Smith.
Catalog chapter: Modern Languages and Literatures: French and Francophone Studies  
Department website: https://www.swarthmore.edu/french-francophone-studies


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