Article

The Rise of the Francophone Postcolonial Intellectual: The Emergence of a Tradition

Details

Citation

Forsdick C & Murphy D (2009) The Rise of the Francophone Postcolonial Intellectual: The Emergence of a Tradition. Modern and Contemporary France, 17 (2), pp. 163-175. https://doi.org/10.1080/09639480902827553

Abstract
Although discussions of the French intellectual often address engagement with anti-colonialism and the decolonisation process more generally, most notably in relation to the Algerian War of Independence, critical attention is rarely directed at the existence of a wider yet related intellectual culture that may connect the disparate parts of the French-speaking world. This article explores the rise of the postcolonial intellectual in this politico-cultural and linguistic space, and asks whether such a figure may be seen as part of a coherent tradition. Foregrounding the interdependency and regular overlap of 'French' and 'Francophone' intellectual cultures, the study creates connections between thinkers in metropolitan France and its former colonies, placed here in a dialectical, conjunctive rather than in a binary, disjunctive relationship. The article explores three case studies - those of Victor Segalen (central to the work of such key postcolonial thinkers as Edouard Glissant and Abdelkebir Khatibi), L‚opold S‚dar Senghor and Frantz Fanon - in order to underline the complex genealogies of the emergent tradition it identifies. It concludes with a consideration of the definitive role of the postcolonial intellectual in debates regarding the legacy of colonialism in contemporary France.

Keywords
Attention; C; CASE studies; Colonialism; COMPLEX; Connections; CULTURE; debate; Debates; Emergence; engagement; EXISTENCE; FRANCE; ORDER; relationship; Role; space; War; work; WORLD

Journal
Modern and Contemporary France: Volume 17, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2009
ISSN0963-9489