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Article
The Limits of Writing in Marie Cardinal's Amour... amours...
Languages Faculty Publications
  • Claire Marrone, Sacred Heart University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
7-1-2002
Abstract

Amour... amours... enters into a body of literature in French, particularly in the postcolonial period, that deals with the bilingual and bicultural aspects of selfhood. In focusing on the France-Algeria connection, the text illustrates the challenges of negotiating between conflicting allegiances. Salient issues in self-definition emerge, including the significance of one's birthplace and the loss of one's homeland. What is interesting in Amour... amours... is the way in which Cardinal conjures up remembrances of Algeria, including stylistic experimentation, intertextual echoes, and the thematization of love evoked in the title. With her protagonist, Lola Lavoie, the author evokes both la voix, or the importance of orality in the work, and la voie, or the means by which she endeavors to express her homelan

Comments

Published: Marrone, Claire. "The Limits of Writing in Marie Cardinal's Amour... amours..." Dalhousie French Studies 59 (Summer 2002): 119-129.

Citation Information
Marrone, Claire. "The Limits of Writing in Marie Cardinal's Amour... amours..." Dalhousie French Studies 59 (Summer 2002): 119-129.