Academic literature on the topic 'Colonies – oceania – fiction'

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Journal articles on the topic "Colonies – oceania – fiction"

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Harris, Jeffrey Ryan. "Polynesia against Paris: Indigenous Anti-Nuclear Literature and the French Colonial Origins of Oceanian Reintegration." Journal of World History 35, no. 4 (2024): 623–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jwh.2024.a943171.

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Abstract: This essay examines Francophone and Anglophone Indigenous Oceanian literature and art to argue that through the predominantly Polynesian response to French nuclear testing in Te Ao Mā’ohi (French Polynesia), French colonialism has inadvertently generated one key cultural movement toward post-colonial Oceanian reintegration—one that extends well beyond the Francophone Pacific. The essay first examines the prose fiction of Chantal Spitz, Rai a Mai [aka Michou Chaze], and Déwé Gorodé to understand Te Ao Mā’ohi’s (French Polynesia's) and Kanaky’s (New Caledonia's) shared experiences of F
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Lavery, Charne. "The Southern Indian Ocean and the Oceanic South." Global Nineteenth-Century Studies 1, no. 1 (2022): 63–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/gncs.2022.10.

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The southern Indian Ocean constitutes a distinct oceanographic region that offers useful links, connections, and perspectives as an area of inquiry, in the domain of colonial and postcolonial literature but also more widely. The region is both particularly oceanic and particularly southern, making it a key part of the ‘oceanic South’, a formulation which overlays the postcolonial poverty of the Global South with its oceanicity. As an area of inquiry it complicates Indian Ocean studies by drawing its purview into colder, wilder, more oceanic regions; centralizes questions of the global - and oc
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Charon, Mylène, and Temiti LEHARTEL. "Decolonial Metatextualities: Strategies of Resistance in Three Contemporary Novels of Oceania." eTropic: electronic journal of studies in the Tropics 22, no. 1 (2023): 197–214. http://dx.doi.org/10.25120/etropic.22.1.2023.3964.

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Decolonial thinkers have stressed that to decolonise is not to reject the colonial legacy, but to deal with it, and to centre First Nations’ perspectives in its critique and in decolonising knowledge. As a critical relationship of a text – with itself, other texts, literature, and culture – metatextuality is a literary device operationalized in contemporary novels to resist persisting colonial powers. In this paper, we present three works of fiction by Indigenous writers of Oceania, and analyse their political use of metatextuality: L’île des rêves écrasés (Island of Shattered Dreams), by Tahi
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Madavi, Manoj Shankarrao. "Decultarization, Disorientation and Political Strategies against the Tribal: A Missing Chapter in Contemporary Mainstream Indian Fiction Writing:." Journal of Humanities and Education Development 4, no. 6 (2022): 102–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.22161/jhed.4.6.11.

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Indian English fiction writers have made their particular assertions about tribals which are incomplete therefore; we do not find much reality in their novels. In the novels like The Strange Case of Billy Biswas, The Princess, The White Tiger and The English August, we find the unauthentic representation of the tribal life. In every novel, tribal life and characters are shown dependable on mainstream heroes for the help. Novelist’s tribal women and man, surrender to mainstream sophisticated social arrangements. In most of the novels, they consider the non-tribal person as god and savior for th
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Madavi, Dr Manoj Shankarrao. "Subaltern Consciousness and Resistance to Hierarchical Hegemony in the Selected Fictions of Legendary Writer- Mahashweta Devi." Journal of Humanities and Education Development 5, no. 6 (2023): 01–04. http://dx.doi.org/10.22161/jhed.5.6.1.

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Mahashweta Devi was a legend in the regional adivasi literature writings. In a true sense, she had taken the responsibilities to give the voices to the marginalized adivasi who were suppressed from the centuries. Her translated novel Chotti Munda and His Arrow was the pathbreaking novel in the field of regional translation. For the first time Birsa Munda, the legendary martyr and adivasi icon of whole Adivasis in India was known through her magnificent novel. During the colonial ruling, the adivasi territory was interrupted by the Britisher’s tax policies and the oppressive treatment of the la
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KITLV, Redactie. "Book Reviews." Bijdragen tot de taal-, land- en volkenkunde / Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences of Southeast Asia 159, no. 2 (2003): 405–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22134379-90003749.

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-Leonard Y. Andaya, Michel Jacq-Hergoualc'h, The Malay Peninsula; Crossroads of the maritime silk road (100 BC-1300 AD). [Translated by Victoria Hobson.] Leiden: Brill, 2002, xxxv + 607 pp. [Handbook of oriental studies, 13. -Greg Bankoff, Resil B. Mojares, The war against the Americans; Resistance and collaboration in Cebu 1899-1906. Quezon city: Ateneo de Manila University, 1999, 250 pp. -R.H. Barnes, Andrea Katalin Molnar, Grandchildren of the Ga'e ancestors; Social organization and cosmology among the Hoga Sara of Flores. Leiden: KITLV Press, 2000, xii + 306 pp. [Verhandeling 185.] -Peter
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7

Gombos, Taylor Jordan. "The Novara Circumnavigation." Central European History, February 28, 2025, 1–21. https://doi.org/10.1017/s000893892400044x.

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The Habsburg Empire has typically been understood as a continental power with few overseas aspirations, or as Robert Musil waxed nostalgically in his fictional Kakania: “A Ship would now and then be sent off to South America or East Asia, but not too often.” It is mostly true, of course, that Austria did not have “ambition for world markets or world power,”1 but recently historians have begun to explore the role colonial fantasy played in an empire with no actual overseas colonies to speak of.2 The Empire did support a series of oceanic voyages in the 19th century. None resulted in permanent s
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Marimoutou, Carpanin. "Cross-cultural Labyrinths in the Literatures of the Indian Ocean." Diogenes, March 31, 2025, 1–15. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0392192124000099.

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Abstract The insular Indian oceanic space is distinguished by a long history of migrations, encounters, conflicts, exchanges, interbreeding, and interculturality. Violence and negotiation lie at the heart of their historical, anthropological, and linguistic processes. The literatures of the Indian Ocean islands, in particular, articulate their representations, their fictional universes and speeches, as well as their modes of writing, with a perpetual interrogation about travels, meetings, frontiers, which constitute the ways of living in places and telling about them. Composed on the basis of
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Books on the topic "Colonies – oceania – fiction"

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Multatuli. Max Havelaar, of, De koffij-veilingen der Nederlandsche Handelmaatschappij: Het handschrift. Lubberhuizen, 2007.

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Multatuli. Max Havelaar oder die Kaffeeversteigerungen der Niederländischen Handels-Gesellschaft. Ullstein Verlag, 1997.

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Multatuli. Max Havelaar, of, De koffiveilingen der Nederlandsche Handelmaatschappy : historisch-kritische uitgave. Van Gorcum, 1992.

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trad, Noble Philippe, and Toebosch Guy éd, eds. Max Havelaar, ou, Les ventes de café de la compagnie commerciale des Pays-Bas: Roman. Actes Sud, 1991.

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van, Es Gijsbert, ed. Max Havelaar, of, De koffieveilingen van de Nederlandse Handelmaatschappij. NRC Boeken, 2010.

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Multatuli. Max Havelaar, or, The coffee auctions of a Dutch trading company. Penguin, 1987.

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7

Reese, Jenn. Horizon: Above World #3. Candlewick Press, 2014.

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Lasky, Kathryn. En route vers le Nouveau monde: Journal d'Esther Whipple, 1620-1621. Gallimard jeunesse, 2005.

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Lasky, Kathryn. A Journey to the New World: The Diary of Remember Patience Whipple, Mayflower 1620 (Dear America Series). Scholastic, 1996.

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Lasky, Kathryn. The diary of Remember Patience Whipple, 1620. Scholastic for the Book People, 2003.

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Book chapters on the topic "Colonies – oceania – fiction"

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Forter, Greg. "Cartographies of the Untimely in Postcolonial Historical Realism." In Critique and Utopia in Postcolonial Historical Fiction. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198830436.003.0001.

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Barry Unsworth’s Sacred Hunger and Amitav Ghosh’s Sea of Poppies develop cognitive-affective maps of empire that reveal its totalizing ambitions. They deploy realist techniques to do so while displaying an intense self-consciousness about such techniques’ limitations. The maps they draw link the Atlantic world (and slavery) with the Indian Ocean (and indentured servitude). This angle of vision moves the historical novel’s frame of reference beyond both the nation and the mono-oceanic paradigms that have emerged as alternatives to nation-based understandings. Finally, and drawing especially on
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Hofmeyr, Isabel. "Southern by Degrees." In The Global South Atlantic. Fordham University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5422/fordham/9780823277872.003.0005.

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From the perspective of Anglophone literature, the South Atlantic has been something of a blank—in colonial maritime fiction, a prefatory space leading up to the Cape of Storms or on the journey home, a fast-forward space as the ship hurries to the metropole. This article suggests that one way to fill this blank is to focus on the subantarctic islands of the South Atlantic and the Indian Ocean. This insular world played a key role in the scramble for the Antarctic and reproduces the role of islands in imperial expansion elsewhere. The article examines two contrasting literary representations o
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