Creole Medievalism
Colonial France and Joseph Bédier’s Middle Ages
How a scholar’s multilingual, multiracial background created a French medieval ideal
416 Pages, 6 x 9 in
- Paperback
- 9780816665266
- Published: January 10, 2011
Details
Creole Medievalism
Colonial France and Joseph Bédier’s Middle Ages
ISBN: 9780816665266
Publication date: January 10th, 2011
416 Pages
8 x 5
In Creole Medievalism, Michelle Warren demonstrates that Bédier's relationship to this multicultural and economically peripheral colony motivates his nationalism in complex ways. Simultaneously proud of his French heritage and nostalgic for the island, Bédier defends French sovereignty based on an ambivalent resistance to his creole culture. Warren shows that in the early twentieth century, influential intellectuals from Réunion helped define the new genre of the "colonial novel," adopting a pro-colonial spirit that shaped both medieval and Francophone studies. Probing the work of a once famous but little understood cultural figure, Creole Medievalism illustrates how postcolonial France and Réunion continue to grapple with histories too varied to meet expectations of national unity.
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Joseph Bédier and the Imperial Nation
1. Roncevaux and Réunion
2. Medieval and Colonial Attractions
3. Between Paris and Saint-Denis
4. Island Philology
5. A Creole Epic
6. Postcolonial Itineraries
Afterword: Medieval Debris
Notes
Bibliography
Index