Staging Creolization
ISBN: 9780813940090
Platform/Publisher: Project MUSE / University of Virginia Press
Digital rights: Users: Unlimited; Printing: Chapters; Download: Chapters
Subjects: Cultural fusion.; Women in literature.; Theater; Caribbean drama (French Creole); Caribbean drama (French Creole);

In Staging Creolization, Emily Sahakian examines seven plays by Ina Césaire, Maryse Condé, Gerty Dambury, and Simone Schwarz-Bart that premiered in the French Caribbean or in France in the 1980s and 1990s and soon thereafter traveled to the United States. Sahakian argues that these late-twentieth-century plays by French Caribbean women writers dramatize and enact creolization--the process of cultural transformation through mixing and conflict that occurred in the context of the legacies of slavery and colonialism.

Sahakian here theorizes creolization as a performance-based process, dramatized by French Caribbean women's plays and enacted through their international production and reception histories. The author contends that the syncretism of the plays is not a static, fixed creole aesthetics but rather a dynamic process of creolization in motion, informed by history and based in the African-derived principle that performance is a space of creativity and transformation that connects past, present, and future.


Emily Sahakian is Associate Professor of Theater and French at the University of Georgia.

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