Literature, or the travelling tattoo

This essay considers Kanak author Déwé Gorodé’s 2009 novel Graines de pin colonnaire and Tahitian author Stéphanie Ari’irau Richard’Vivi’s 2006 novel Matamimi, ou La vie nous attend as ‘mobile manuscripts’: dialogic, literary border-crossings that facilitate communication and connections in Oceania....

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Julia L. Frengs
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Liverpool University Press 2017-01-01
Series:Francosphères
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/doi/10.3828/franc.2017.13
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849715410276974592
author Julia L. Frengs
author_facet Julia L. Frengs
author_sort Julia L. Frengs
collection DOAJ
description This essay considers Kanak author Déwé Gorodé’s 2009 novel Graines de pin colonnaire and Tahitian author Stéphanie Ari’irau Richard’Vivi’s 2006 novel Matamimi, ou La vie nous attend as ‘mobile manuscripts’: dialogic, literary border-crossings that facilitate communication and connections in Oceania. The boundary-crossing, permeable characteristics of the Oceanian tattoo as conceptualized in the works of Sean Mallon, Albert Wendt, and Margo DeMello provide a metaphorical lens through which I suggest we regard the corporeal literary engagement of the two Oceanian women authors examined here. Envisioned as coterminous with the tattoo, Oceanian literature is endowed with similar boundary-transcending functions: it travels, influences, and becomes informed by its connections with other bodies and world literatures, enabling an international dialogue between writers, within Oceania and beyond. The study demonstrates how Gorodé and Ari’irau employ socially inscribed, marked bodies to participate in an inter-Oceanic conversation that textually reinforces their mutual concern for a continued effervescence of an Oceanian literary tradition in French.
format Article
id doaj-art-b7a0e4ce4d5c4f02a9c4295eed892b5a
institution DOAJ
issn 2046-3820
2046-3839
language English
publishDate 2017-01-01
publisher Liverpool University Press
record_format Article
series Francosphères
spelling doaj-art-b7a0e4ce4d5c4f02a9c4295eed892b5a2025-08-20T03:13:25ZengLiverpool University PressFrancosphères2046-38202046-38392017-01-016216317810.3828/franc.2017.13Literature, or the travelling tattooJulia L. Frengs0University of Nebraska-LincolnThis essay considers Kanak author Déwé Gorodé’s 2009 novel Graines de pin colonnaire and Tahitian author Stéphanie Ari’irau Richard’Vivi’s 2006 novel Matamimi, ou La vie nous attend as ‘mobile manuscripts’: dialogic, literary border-crossings that facilitate communication and connections in Oceania. The boundary-crossing, permeable characteristics of the Oceanian tattoo as conceptualized in the works of Sean Mallon, Albert Wendt, and Margo DeMello provide a metaphorical lens through which I suggest we regard the corporeal literary engagement of the two Oceanian women authors examined here. Envisioned as coterminous with the tattoo, Oceanian literature is endowed with similar boundary-transcending functions: it travels, influences, and becomes informed by its connections with other bodies and world literatures, enabling an international dialogue between writers, within Oceania and beyond. The study demonstrates how Gorodé and Ari’irau employ socially inscribed, marked bodies to participate in an inter-Oceanic conversation that textually reinforces their mutual concern for a continued effervescence of an Oceanian literary tradition in French.http://www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/doi/10.3828/franc.2017.13Déwé GorodéAri’irau Richard’VivitattoosbodyNew CaledoniaKanak
spellingShingle Julia L. Frengs
Literature, or the travelling tattoo
Francosphères
Déwé Gorodé
Ari’irau Richard’Vivi
tattoos
body
New Caledonia
Kanak
title Literature, or the travelling tattoo
title_full Literature, or the travelling tattoo
title_fullStr Literature, or the travelling tattoo
title_full_unstemmed Literature, or the travelling tattoo
title_short Literature, or the travelling tattoo
title_sort literature or the travelling tattoo
topic Déwé Gorodé
Ari’irau Richard’Vivi
tattoos
body
New Caledonia
Kanak
url http://www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/doi/10.3828/franc.2017.13
work_keys_str_mv AT julialfrengs literatureorthetravellingtattoo