Les mots maoris dans The Bone People de Keri Hulme : exotisme et intimisme

Although Keri Hulme’s the bone people is now recognised as forming part of the literary canon in New Zealand, its publication in 1985 met with some controversy, particularly around the author’s choice to claim herself a Maori in culture and ethnicity. Part of the debate focused around Hulme’s decisi...

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Main Author: Alice Braun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses universitaires de Rennes 2015-02-01
Series:Revue LISA
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/8633
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author Alice Braun
author_facet Alice Braun
author_sort Alice Braun
collection DOAJ
description Although Keri Hulme’s the bone people is now recognised as forming part of the literary canon in New Zealand, its publication in 1985 met with some controversy, particularly around the author’s choice to claim herself a Maori in culture and ethnicity. Part of the debate focused around Hulme’s decision to compile a glossary of the Maori words used in the text, a device which carries a significant literary and political weight in the context of post-colonial studies. This paper shows how the use of Maori words in the English text may be accused of participating in a strategy of “exoticisation” of the text, though they still have a strong symbolic meaning within the economy of the narrative. They materialise a whole community’s alienation from nature and from their own culture, and they also allow Hulme to delineate new forms of love and family ties that are yet to be invented.
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spelling doaj-art-f012707b76f8477fb52212661b5bab412025-01-06T09:02:55ZengPresses universitaires de RennesRevue LISA1762-61532015-02-011310.4000/lisa.8633Les mots maoris dans The Bone People de Keri Hulme : exotisme et intimismeAlice BraunAlthough Keri Hulme’s the bone people is now recognised as forming part of the literary canon in New Zealand, its publication in 1985 met with some controversy, particularly around the author’s choice to claim herself a Maori in culture and ethnicity. Part of the debate focused around Hulme’s decision to compile a glossary of the Maori words used in the text, a device which carries a significant literary and political weight in the context of post-colonial studies. This paper shows how the use of Maori words in the English text may be accused of participating in a strategy of “exoticisation” of the text, though they still have a strong symbolic meaning within the economy of the narrative. They materialise a whole community’s alienation from nature and from their own culture, and they also allow Hulme to delineate new forms of love and family ties that are yet to be invented.https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/8633genderautobiographypostcolonialism(-ity)sexualityexoticismviolence
spellingShingle Alice Braun
Les mots maoris dans The Bone People de Keri Hulme : exotisme et intimisme
Revue LISA
gender
autobiography
postcolonialism(-ity)
sexuality
exoticism
violence
title Les mots maoris dans The Bone People de Keri Hulme : exotisme et intimisme
title_full Les mots maoris dans The Bone People de Keri Hulme : exotisme et intimisme
title_fullStr Les mots maoris dans The Bone People de Keri Hulme : exotisme et intimisme
title_full_unstemmed Les mots maoris dans The Bone People de Keri Hulme : exotisme et intimisme
title_short Les mots maoris dans The Bone People de Keri Hulme : exotisme et intimisme
title_sort les mots maoris dans the bone people de keri hulme exotisme et intimisme
topic gender
autobiography
postcolonialism(-ity)
sexuality
exoticism
violence
url https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/8633
work_keys_str_mv AT alicebraun lesmotsmaorisdansthebonepeopledekerihulmeexotismeetintimisme