Métissages: Williams Sassine's Saint Monsieur Baly, Wirriyamu, and Mémoire d'une peau

Baker, Charlotte (2012) Métissages: Williams Sassine's Saint Monsieur Baly, Wirriyamu, and Mémoire d'une peau. Postcolonial Text, 7 (2).

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Abstract

The concept of métissage has appeared in numerous discourses throughout history to refer to cultural encounters and the mixing of races. Thus, Gloria Onyeoziri notes, métissage is 'a term which [...] still carries significant traces of historical practices of oppression, psychological disturbances, sexual exploitation and struggles for the survival of cultural identities." In colonial Africa, mixed race individuals problematised the relationship between Self and Other, and the figure of the métis became inextricably intertwined with colonial histories of domination and exclusion. However, in the postcolonial era, the objectified figure of the métis emerged as a liberated and free speaking subject, and new models of métissage became available. Métissage materialised as a site of purposeful ambiguity, leading Françoise Lionnet to define it as "the site of undecidability and indeterminacy," a position "from which to challenge hegemonic languages." This article focuses on three novels by Francophone Guinean writer Williams Sassine: Saint Monsieur Baly (1973), Wirriyamu (1976) and Mémoire d'une peau (1998). The study examines the ways in which Sassine explores different manifestations of métissage in his fictional work to highlight the tensions and paradoxes underlying postcolonial identity in Francophone sub-Saharan Africa.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Postcolonial Text
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/core/keywords/european_languages_and_cultures
Subjects:
?? european languages and culturesp language and literature ??
ID Code:
58607
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
25 Sep 2012 10:09
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
23 Mar 2024 00:39