Book Chapter
Details
Citation
Grayson H (2022) ¡®R¨¦cit d¡¯enfance, r¨¦cit de distance. Gaby as implicated subject in Ga?l Faye¡¯s Petit Pays¡¯. In: Fraiture P (ed.) Unfinished Histories: Empire and Postcolonial Resonance in Central Africa and Belgium. Leuven, Belgium: Leuven University Press, pp. 293-311. https://doi.org/10.11116/9789461664914
Abstract
First paragraph: Ga?l Faye¡¯s award-winning 2016 novel Petit Pays has received critical acclaim for its lyrical depiction of a childhood universe set alongside the violence of Burundi¡¯s civil war and the genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda. Translated into over forty languages, the novel has been hailed varyingly as an ode to a lost paradise of childhood in Burundi, and a contemporary oral tale of political realism. The focus of this reading will be on Faye¡¯s interweaving of a child¡¯s perspective with a sustained focus on proximity and distance, and how these shed new light on this historical experience. The figure of the child is a vehicle for exploring subjects implicated in violence; and alongside this, distance draws our attention to how intricately different actors remain involved. In this way we can start to inch beyond the binaries of innocence/guilt, victim/perpetrator that dominate discussion of this period when transitional justice frameworks remain the primary approach to episodes of extreme violence. Combining both these elements, Faye¡¯s novel brings Gaby¡¯s position to the fore and reveals such subjects as complexly implicated in systemic injustice. As such, the insight is not on those larger-than-life political figures so dominant in Great Lakes history, but rather on the childhood of an ordinary figure.
Status | Published |
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Funders | |
Publication date | 31/12/2022 |
Publication date online | 15/11/2022 |
Publisher | Leuven University Press |
Place of publication | Leuven, Belgium |
ISBN | 9789461664914 |
eISBN | 9789462703575 |
People (1)
Senior Lecturer, French