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26 avril 2010 1 26 /04 /avril /2010 12:58

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cultural Identity and

Diaspora

STUART HALL

A new cinema of the Caribbean is emerging, joining the company of

the other 'Third Cinemas'. It is related to, but different from the

vibrant film and other forms of visual representation of the

Afro-Caribbean (and Asian) 'blacks' of the diasporas of the West -

the new post-colonial subjects. All these cultural practices and forms

of representation have the black subject at their centre, putting the

issue of cultural identity in question. Who is this emergent, new

subject of the cinema? From where does he/she speak? Practices of

representation always implicate the positions from which we speak

or write - the positions of

 

 

enunciation.

What recent theories of

enunciation suggest is that, though we speak, so to say 'in our own

name', of ourselves and from our own experience, nevertheless who

speaks, and the subject who is spoken of, are never identical, never

exactly in the same place. Identity is not as transparent or

unproblematic as we think. Perhaps instead of thinking of identity as

an already accomplished fact, which the new cultural practices then

represent, we should think, instead, of identity as a 'production',

which is never complete, always in process, and always constituted

within, not outside, representation. This view problematises the

very authority and authenticity to which the term, 'cultural identity',

lays claim.

We seek, here, to open a dialogue, an investigation, on the subject

of cultural identity and representation. Of course, the 'I' who writes

here must also be thought of as, itself, 'enunciated'. We all write and

speak from a particular place and time, from a history and a culture

which is specific. What we say is always 'in context',

 

 

positioned.

I

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Cultural Identity and Diaspora

was born into and spent my childhood and adolescence in a lowermiddle-

class family in Jamaica. I have lived all my adult life in

England, in the shadow of the black diaspora - 'in the belly of the

beast'. I write against the background of a lifetime's work in cultural

studies. If the paper seems preoccupied with the diaspora experience

and its narratives of displacement, it is worth remembering that all

discourse is 'placed', and the heart has its reasons.

There are at least two different ways of thinking about 'cultural

identity'. The first position defines 'cultural identity' in terms of one,

shared culture, a sort of collective 'one true self', hiding inside the

many other, more superficial or artificially imposed 'selves', which

people with a shared history and ancestry hold in common. Within

the terms of this definition, our cultural identities reflect the common

historical experiences and shared cultural codes which provide us, as

'one people', with stable, unchanging and continuous frames of

reference and meaning, beneath the shifting divisions and vicissitudes

of our actual history. This 'oneness', underlying all the other,

more superficial differences, is the truth, the essence, of 'Caribbeanness',

of the black experience. It is this identity which a Caribbean or

black diaspora must discover, excavate, bring to light and express

through cinematic representation.

Such a conception of cultural identity played a critical role in all the

post-colonial struggles which have so profoundly reshaped our world.

It lay at the centre of the vision of the poets of 'Negritude', like Aimee

Ceasire and Leopold Senghor, and of the Pan-African political project,

earlier in the century. It continues to be a very powerful and

creative force in emergent forms of representation amongst hitherto

marginalised peoples. In post-colonial societies, the rediscovery of

this identity is often the object of what Frantz Fanon once called a

passionate research ... directed by the secret hope of discovering

beyond the misery of today, beyond self-contempt, resignation and

abjuration, some very beautiful and splendid era whose existence

rehabilitates us both in regard to ourselves and in regard to others.

New forms of cultural practice in these societies address themselves

to this project for the very good reason that, as Fanon puts it, in the

recent past,

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Identity

Colonisation is not satisfied merely with holding a people in its grip and

emptying the native's brain of all form and content. By a kind of

perverted logic, it turns to the past of oppressed people, and distorts,

disfigures and destroys it.

 

 

1

The question which Fanon's observation poses is, what is the nature

of this 'profound research' which drives the new forms of visual and

cinematic representation? Is it only a matter of unearthing that

which the colonial experience buried and overlaid, bringing to light

the hidden continuities it suppressed? Or is a quite different

practice entailed - not the rediscovery but the

 

 

production

of

identity. Not an identity grounded in the archaeology, but in the

re-telling

 

 

of the past?

We should not, for a moment, underestimate or neglect the

importance of the act of imaginative rediscovery which this

conception of a rediscovered, essential identity entails. 'Hidden

histories' have played a critical role in the emergence of many of the

most important social movements of our time - feminist,

anti-colonial and anti-racist. The photographic work of a generation

of Jamaican and Rastafarian artists, or of a visual artist like Armet

Francis (a Jamaican-born photographer who has lived in Britain

since the age of eight) is a testimony to the continuing creative

power of this conception of identity within the emerging practices of

representation. Francis's photographs of the peoples of The Black

Triangle, taken in Africa, the Caribbean, the USA and the UK,

attempt to reconstruct in visual terms 'the underlying unity of the

black people whom colonisation and slavery distributed across the

African diaspora.' His text is an act of imaginary reunification.

Crucially, such images offer a way of imposing an imaginary

coherence on the experience of dispersal and fragmentation, which

is the history of all enforced diasporas. They do this by representing

or 'figuring' Africa as the mother of these different civilisations. This

Triangle is, after all, 'centred' in Africa. Africa is the name of the

missing term, the great aporia, which lies at the centre of our

cultural identity and gives it a meaning which, until recently, it

lacked. No one who looks at these textural images now, in the light

of the history of transportation, slavery and migration, can fail to

understand how the rift of separation, the 'loss of identity', which has

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Cultural Identity and Diaspora

been integral to the Caribbean experience only begins to be healed

when these forgotten connections are once more set in place. Such

texts restore an imaginary fullness or plentitude, to set against the

broken rubric of our past. They are resources of resistance and

identity, with which to confront the fragmented and pathological

ways in which that experience has been reconstructed within the

dominant regimes of cinematic and visual representation of the

West.

There is, however, a second, related but different view of cultural

identity. This second position recognises that, as well as the many

points of similarity, there are also critical points of deep and

significant

 

 

difference

which constitute 'what we really are'; or rather

- since history has intervened - 'what we have become'. We cannot

speak for very long, with any exactness, about 'one experience, one

identity', without acknowledging its other side - the ruptures and

discontinuities which constitute, precisely, the Caribbean's 'uniqueness'.

Cultural identity, in this second sense, is a matter of

'becoming' as well as of 'being'. It belongs to the future as much as to

the past. It is not something which already exists, transcending

place, time, history and culture. Cultural identities come from

somewhere, have histories. But, like everything which is historical,

they undergo constant transformation. Far from being eternally

fixed in some essentialised past, they are subject to the continuous

'play' of history, culture and power. Far from being grounded in a

mere 'recovery' of the past, which is waiting to be found, and which,

when found, will secure our sense of ourselves into eternity,

identities are the names we give to the different ways we are

positioned by, and position ourselves within, the narratives of the

past.

It is only from this second position that we can properly

understand the traumatic character of 'the colonial experience'. The

ways in which black people, black experiences, were positioned and

subject-ed in the dominant regimes of representation were the

effects of a critical exercise of cultural power and normalisation. Not

only, in Said's 'Orientalist' sense, were we constructed as different

and other within the categories of knowledge of the West by those

regimes. They had the power to make us see and experience

ourselves

 

 

as 'Other'. Every regime of representation is a regime of

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Identity

power formed, as Foucault reminds us, by the fatal couplet,

'power/knowledge'. But this kind of knowledge is internal, not

external. It is one thing to position a subject or set of peoples as the

Other of a dominant discourse. It is quite another thing to subject

them to that 'knowledge', not only as a matter of imposed will and

domination, by the power of inner compulsion and subjective

con-formation to the norm. That is the lesson - the sombre majesty -

of Fanon's insight into the colonising experience in

 

 

Black Skin,

White Masks.

This inner expropriation of cultural identity cripples and deforms.

If its silences are not resisted, they produce, in Fanon's vivid phrase,

'individuals without an anchor, without horizon, colourless,

stateless, rootless - a race of angels'.

 

 

2

Nevertheless, this idea of

otherness as an inner compulsion changes our conception of 'cultural

identity'. In this perspective, cultural identity is not a fixed essence

at all, lying unchanged outside history and culture. It is not some

universal and transcendental spirit inside us on which history has

made no fundamental mark. It is not once-and-for-all. It is not a fixed

origin to which we can make some final and absolute Return. Of

course, it is not a mere phantasm either. It is

 

 

something

- not a mere

trick of the imagination. It has its histories - and histories have their

real, material and symbolic effects. The past continues to speak to

us. But it no longer addresses us as a simple, factual 'past', since our

relation to it, like the child's relation to the mother, is always-already

'after the break'. It is always constructed through memory, fantasy,

narrative and myth. Cultural identities are the points of

identification, the unstable points of identification or suture, which

are made, within the discourses of history and culture. Not an

essence but a

 

 

positioning.

Hence, there is always a politics of

identity, a politics of position, which has no absolute guarantee in an

unproblematic, transcendental 'law of origin'.

This second view of cultural identity is much less familiar, and

more unsettling. If identity does not proceed, in a straight,

unbroken line, from some fixed origin, how are we to understand its

formation? We might think of black Caribbean identities as 'framed'

by two axes or vectors, simultaneously operative: the vector of

similarity and continuity; and the vector of difference and rupture.

Caribbean identities always have to be thought of in terms of the

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Cultural Identity and Diaspora

dialogic relationship between these two axes. The one gives us some

grounding in, some continuity with, the past. The second reminds us

that what we share is precisely the experience of a profound

discontinuity: the peoples dragged into slavery, transportation,

colonisation, migration, came predominantly from Africa - and when

that supply ended, it was temporarily refreshed by indentured

labour from the Asian subcontinent. (This neglected fact explains

why, when you visit Guyana or Trinidad, you see, symbolically

inscribed in the faces of their peoples, the paradoxical 'truth' of

Christopher Columbus's mistake: you

 

 

can

find 'Asia' by sailing west,

if you know where to look!) In the history of the modern world, there

are few more traumatic ruptures to match these enforced

separations from Africa - already figured, in the European

imaginary, as 'the Dark Continent'. But the slaves were also from

different countries, tribal communities, villages, languages and gods.

African religion, which has been so profoundly formative in

Caribbean spiritual life, is precisely

 

 

different

from Christian

monotheism in believing that God is so powerful that he can only be

known through a proliferation of spiritual manifestations, present

everywhere in the natural and social world. These gods live on, in an

underground existence, in the hybridised religious universe of

Haitian voodoo, pocomania, Native pentacostalism, Black baptism,

Rastafarianism and the black Saints Latin American Catholicism.

The paradox is that it was the uprooting of slavery and transportation

and the insertion into the plantation economy (as well as the

symbolic economy) of the Western world that 'unified' these peoples

across their differences, in the same moment as it cut them off from

direct access to their past.

Difference, therefore, persists - in and alongside continuity. To

return to the Caribbean after any long absence is to experience again

the shock of the 'doubleness' of similarity and difference. Visiting

the French Caribbean for the first time, I also saw at once how

different Martinique is from, say, Jamaica: and this is no mere

difference of topography or climate. It is a profound difference of

culture and history. And the difference

 

 

matters.

It positions

Martiniquains and Jamaicans as

 

 

both the same and

different.

Moreover, the boundaries of difference are continually repositioned

in relation to different points of reference. Vis-a-vis the developed

227

Identity

West, we are very much 'the same'. We belong to the marginal, the

underdeveloped, the periphery, the 'Other'. We are at the outer

edge, the 'rim', of the metropolitan world - always 'South' to

someone else's

 

 

El Norte.

At the same time, we do not stand in the same relation of the

'otherness' to the metropolitan centres. Each has negotiated its

economic, political and cultural dependency differently. And this

'difference', whether we like it or not, is already inscribed in our

cultural identities. In turn, it is this negotiation of identity which

makes us, vis-a-vis other Latin American people, with a very similar

history, different - Caribbeans,

 

 

les Antilliennes

('islanders' to their

mainland). And yet, vis-a-vis one another, Jamaican, Haitian, Cuban,

Guadeloupean, Barbadian, etc ...

How, then, to describe this play of 'difference' within identity?

The common history — transportation, slavery, colonisation - has

been profoundly formative. For all these societies, unifying us across

our differences. But it does not constitute a common

 

 

origin,

since it

was, metaphorically as well as literally, a translation. The inscription

of difference is also specific and critical. I use the word 'play' because

the double meaning of the metaphor is important. It suggests, on the

one hand, the instability, the permanent unsettlement, the lack of

any final resolution. On the other hand, it reminds us that the place

where this 'doubleness' is most powerfully to be heard is 'playing'

within the varieties of Caribbean musics. This cultural play' could

not therefore be represented, cinematically, as a simple, binary

opposition - 'past/present', 'them/us'. Its complexity exceeds this

binary structure of representation. At different places, times, in

relation to different questions, the boundaries are re-sited. They

become, not only what they have, at times, certainly been -

mutually excluding categories, but also what they sometimes are -

differential points along a sliding scale.

One trivial example is the way Martinique both

 

 

is and

is not

'French'. It is, of course, a

 

 

department

of France, and this is

reflected in its standard and style of life, Fort de France is a much

richer, more 'fashionable' place than Kingston - which is not only

visibly poorer, but itself at a point of transition between being 'in

fashion' in an Anglo-African and Afro-American way - for those who

can afford to be in any sort of fashion at all. Yet, what is distinctively

228

Cultural Identity and Diaspora

'Martiniquais' can only be described in terms of that special and

peculiar supplement which the black and mulatto skin adds to the

'refinement' and sophistication of a Parisian-derived

 

 

haute couture:

that is, a sophistication which, because it is black, is always

transgressive.

To capture this sense of difference which is not pure 'otherness',

we need to deploy the play on words of a theorist like Jacques

Derrida. Derrida uses the anomalous 'a' in his way of writing

'difference' -

 

 

differance

- as a marker which sets up a disturbance in

our settled understanding or translation of the word/concept. It sets

the word in motion to new meanings without erasing the

 

 

trace

of its

other meanings. His sense of

 

 

differance,

as Christopher Norris puts

it, thus

remains suspended between the two French verbs 'to differ' and 'to

defer' (postpone), both of which contribute to its textual force but

neither of which can fully capture its meaning. Language depends on

difference, as Saussure showed ... the structure of distinctive

propositions which make up its basic economy. Where Derrida breaks

new ground ... is in the extent to which 'differ' shades into 'defer' ... the

idea that meaning is always deferred, perhaps to this point of an endless

supplementarity, by the play of signification.

 

 

3

This second sense of difference challenges the fixed binaries which

stablise meaning and representation and show how meaning is never

finished or completed, but keeps on moving to encompass other,

additional or supplementary meanings, which, as Norris puts it

elsewhere,

 

 

4

'disturb the classical economy of language and

representation'. Without relations of difference, no representation

could occur. But what is then constituted within representation is

always open to being deferred, staggered, serialised.

Where, then, does identity come in to this infinite postponement

of meaning? Derrida does not help us as much as he might here,

though the notion of the 'trace' goes some way towards it. This is

where it sometimes seems as if Derrida has permitted his profound

theoretical insights to be reappropriated by his disciples into a

celebration of formal 'playfulness', which evacuates them of their

political meaning. For if signification depends upon the endless

repositioning of its differential terms, meaning, in any specific

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Identity

instance, depends on the contingent and arbitrary stop - the necessary

and temporary 'break' in the infinite semiosis of language. This

does not detract from the original insight. It only threatens to do so if

we mistake this 'cut' of identity - this

 

 

positioning,

which makes

meaning possible - as a natural and permanent, rather than an

arbitrary and contingent 'ending' - whereas I understand every such

position as 'strategic' and arbitrary, in the sense that there is no

permanent equivalence between the particular sentence we close,

and its true meaning, as such. Meaning continues to unfold, so to

speak, beyond the arbitrary closure which makes it, at any moment,

possible. It is always either over- or under-determined, either an

excess or a supplement. There is always something 'left over'.

It is possible, with this conception of 'difference', to rethink the

positionings and repositionings of Caribbean cultural identities in

relation to at least three 'presences', to borrow Aimee Cesaire's and

Leopold Senghor's metaphor:

 

 

Presence Africaine, Presence

Europeenne,

 

 

and the third, most ambiguous, presence of all - the

sliding term,

 

 

Presence Americain.

Of course, I am collapsing, for the

moment, the many other cultural 'presences' which constitute the

complexity of Caribbean identity (Indian, Chinese, Lebanese etc). I

mean America, here, not in its 'first-world' sense - the big cousin to

the North whose 'rim' we occupy, but in the second, broader sense:

America, the 'New World',

 

 

Terra Incognita.

Presence Africaine

 

 

is the site of the repressed. Apparently silenced

beyond memory by the power of the experience of slavery, Africa was,

in fact present everywhere: in the everyday life and customs of the

slave quarters, in the languages and patois of the plantations, in names

and words, often disconnected from their taxonomies, in the secret

syntactical structures through which other languages were spoken, in

the stories and tales told to children, in religious practices and beliefs,

in the spiritual life, the arts, crafts, musics and rhythms of slave and

post-emancipation society. Africa, the signified which could not be

represented directly in slavery, remained and remains the unspoken,

unspeakable 'presence' in Caribbean culture. It is 'hiding' behind

every verbal inflection, every narrative twist of Caribbean cultural

life. It is the secret code with which every Western text was 're-read'.

It is the ground-bass of every rhythm and bodily movement.

 

 

This

was

- i s - the 'Africa' that 'is alive and well in the diaspora'.

 

 

5

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Cultural Identity and Diaspora

When I was growing up in the 1940s and 1950s as a child in

Kingston, I was surrounded by the signs, music and rhythms of this

Africa of the diaspora, which only existed as a result of a long and

discontinuous series of transformations. But, although almost

everyone around me was some shade of brown or black (Africa

'speaks'!), I never once heard a single person refer to themselves or

to others as, in some way, or as having been at some time in the past,

'African'. It was only in the 1970s that this Afro-Caribbean identity

became historically available to the great majority of Jamaican

people, at home and abroad. In this historic moment, Jamaicans

discovered themselves to be 'black' - just as, in the same moment,

they discovered themselves to be the sons and daughters of 'slavery'.

This profound cultural discovery, however, was not, and could not

be, made directly, without 'mediation'. It could only be made

through

 

 

the impact on popular life of the post-colonial revolution,

the civil rights struggles, the culture of Rastafarianism and the music

of reggae - the metaphors, the figures or signifiers of a new

construction of'Jamaican-ness'. These signified a 'new' Africa of the

New World, grounded in an 'old' Africa: - a spiritual journey of

discovery that led, in the Caribbean, to an indigenous cultural

revolution; this is Africa, as we might say, necessarily 'deferred' - as

a spiritual, cultural and political metaphor.

It is the presence/absence of Africa, in this form, which has made

it the privileged signifier of new conceptions of Caribbean identity.

Everyone in the Caribbean, of whatever ethnic background, must

sooner or later come to terms with this African presence. Black,

brown, mulatto, white - all must look

 

 

Presence Africaine

in the face,

speak its name. But whether it is, in this sense, an

 

 

origin

of our

identities, unchanged by four hundred years of displacement,

dismemberment, transportation, to which we could in any final or

literal sense return, is more open to doubt. The original 'Africa' is no

longer there. It too has been transformed. History is, in that sense,

irreversible. We must not collude with the West which, precisely,

normalises and appropriates Africa by freezing it into some timeless

zone of the primitive, unchanging past. Africa must at last be

reckoned with by Caribbean people, but it cannot in any simple

sense by merely recovered.

It belongs irrevocably, for us, to what Edward Said once called an

231

Identity

'imaginative geography and history', which helps 'the mind to

intensify its own sense of itself by dramatising the difference

between what is close to it and what is far away'. It 'has acquired an

imaginative or figurative value we can name and feel'.

 

 

7

Our

belongingness to it constitutes what Benedict Anderson calls 'an

imagined community'.

 

 

8 To this

'Africa', which is a necessary part of

the Caribbean imaginary, we can't literally go home again.

The character of this displaced 'homeward' journey - its length

and complexity - comes across vividly, in a variety of texts. Tony

Sewell's documentary archival photographs, Garvey's Children: the

Legacy of Marcus Garvey, tells the story of a 'return' to an African

identity which went, necessarily, by the long route-through London

and the United States. It 'ends', not in Ethiopia but with Garvey's

statue in front of the St Ann Parish Library in Jamaica: not with a

traditional tribal chant but with the music of Burning Spear and Bob

Marley's Redemption Song. This is our long journey' home. Derek

Bishton's courageous visual and written text,

 

 

Black Heart Man

- the

story of the journey of a

 

 

white

photographer 'on the trail of the

promised land' - starts in England, and goes, through Shashemene,

the place in Ethiopia to which many Jamaican people have found

their way on their search for the Promised Land, and slavery; but it

ends in Pinnacle, Jamaica, where the first Rastafarian settlements

was established, and 'beyond' - among the dispossessed of

20th-century Kingston and the streets of Handsworth, where

Bishton's voyage of discovery first began. These symbolic journies

are necessary for us all - and necessarily circular. This is the Africa

we must return to - but 'by another route': what Africa has

 

 

become

in the New World, what we have made of 'Africa': 'Africa' - as we

re-tell it through politics, memory and desire.

What of the second, troubling, term in the identity equation - the

European presence? For many of us, this is a matter not of too little

but of too much. Where Africa was a case of the unspoken, Europe

was a case of that which is endlessly speaking - and endlessly

speaking

 

 

us.

The European presence interrupts the innocence of the

whole discourse of 'difference' in the Caribbean by introducing the

question of power. 'Europe' belongs irrevocably to the play' of

power, to the lines of force and consent, to the role of the

 

 

dominant,

in Caribbean culture. In terms of colonialism, underdevelopment,

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Cultural Identity and Diaspora

poverty and the racism of colour, the European presence is that

which, in visual representation, has positioned the black subject

within its dominant regimes of representation: the colonial

discourse, the literatures of adventure and exploration, the romance

of the exotic, the ethnographic and travelling eye, the tropical

languages of tourism, travel brochure and Hollywood and the

violent, pornographic languages of

 

 

ganja

and urban violence.

Because

 

 

Presence Europeenne

is about exclusion, imposition and

expropriation, we are often tempted to locate that power as wholly

external to us - an extrinsic force, whose influence can be thrown off

like the serpent sheds its skin. What Frantz Fanon reminds us, in

Black Skin, White Masks,

 

 

is how this power has become a

constitutive element in our own identities.

The movements, the attitudes, the glances of the other fixed me there,

in the sense in which a chemical solution is fixed by a dye. I was

indignant; I demanded an explanation. Nothing happened. I burst apart.

Now the fragments have been put together again by another self.

 

 

9

This 'look', from - so to speak - the place of the Other, fixes us, not

only in its violence, hostility and aggression, but in the ambivalence

of its desire. This brings us face to face, not simply with the

dominating European presence as the site or 'scene' of integration

where those other presences which it had actively disaggregated

were recomposed - re-framed, put together in a new way; but as the

site of a profound splitting and doubling - what Homi Bhaba has

called 'the ambivalent identifications of the racist world ... the

'otherness' of the self inscribed in the perverse palimpsest of colonial

identity.'

 

 

10

The dialogue of power and resistance, of refusal and recognition,

with and against

 

 

Presence Europeenne

is almost as complex as the

'dialogue' with Africa. In terms of popular cultural life, it is nowhere

to be found in its pure, pristine state. It is always-already fused,

syncretised, with other cultural elements. It is always-already

creolised - not lost beyond the Middle Passage, but ever-present:

from the harmonics in our musics to the ground-bass of Africa,

traversing and intersecting our lives at every point. How can we

stage this dialogue so that, finally, we can place it, without terror or

violence, rather than being forever placed by it? Can we ever

233

Identity

recognise its irreversible influence, whilst resisting its imperialising

eye? The engima is impossible, so far, to resolve. It requires the

most complex of cultural strategies. Think, for example, of the

dialogue of every Caribbean filmmaker or writer, one way or

another, with the dominant cinemas and literature of the West - the

complex relationship of young black British filmmakers with the

'avant-gardes' of European and American filmmaking. Who could

describe this tense and tortured dialogue as a 'one way trip?

The Third, 'New World' presence, is not so much power, as

ground, place, territory. It is the juncture-point where the many

cultural tributaries meet, the 'empty' land (the European colonisers

emptied it) where strangers from every other part of the globe

collided. None of the people who now occupy the islands - black,

brown, white, African, European, American, Spanish, French, East

Indian, Chinese, Portugese, Jew, Dutch - originally 'belonged'

there. It is the space where the creolisations and assimilations and

syncretisms were negotiated. The New World is the third term - the

primal scene - where the fateful/fatal encounter was staged between

Africa and the West. It also has to be understood as the place of

many, continuous displacements: of the original pre-Columbian

inhabitants, the Arawaks, Caribs and Amerindians, permanently

displaced from their homelands and decimated; of other peoples

displaced in different ways from Africa, Asia and Europe; the

displacements of slavery, colonisation and conquest. It stands for the

endless ways in which Caribbean people have been destined to

'migrate'; it is the signifier of migration itself- of travelling, voyaging

and return as fate, as destiny; of the Antillean as the prototype of the

modern or postmodern New World nomad, continually moving

between centre and periphery. This preoccupation with movement

and migration Caribbean cinema shares with many other 'Third

Cinemas', but it is one of our defining themes, and it is destined to

cross the narrative of every film script or cinematic image.

Presence Americaine

 

 

continues to have its silences, its

suppressions. Peter Hulme, in his essay on 'Islands of Enchantment'

11

 

 

reminds us that the word 'Jamaica' is the Hispanic form of

the indigenous Arawak name - 'land of wood and water' - which

Columbus's re-naming ('Santiago') never replaced. The Arawak

presence remains today a ghostly one, visible in the islands mainly

234

Cultural Identity and Diaspora

in museums and archeological sites, part of the barely knowable or

usable 'past'. Hulme notes that it is not represented in the emblem

of the Jamaican National Heritage Trust, for example, which chose

instead the figure of Diego Pimienta, 'an African who fought for his

Spanish masters against the English invasion of the island in 1655' -

a deferred, metonymic, sly and sliding representation of Jamaican

identity if ever there was one! He recounts the story of how Prime

Minister Edward Seaga tried to alter the Jamaican coat-of-arms,

which consists of two Arawak figures holding a shield with five

pineapples, surmounted by an alligator. 'Can the crushed and

extinct Arawaks represent the dauntless character of Jamaicans?

Does the low-slung, near extinct crocodile, a cold-blooded reptile,

symbolise the warm, soaring spirit of Jamaicans?' Prime Minister

Seaga asked rhetorically.

 

 

12

There can be few political statements

which so eloquently testify to the complexities entailed in the

process of trying to represent a diverse people with a diverse history

through a single, hegemonic 'identity'. Fortunately, Mr Seaga's

invitation to the Jamaican people, who are overwhelmingly of

African descent, to start their 'remembering' by first 'forgetting'

something else, got the comeuppance it so richly deserved.

The 'New World' presence - America,

 

 

Terra Incognita

- is

therefore itself the beginning of diaspora, of diversity, of hybridity

and difference, what makes Afro-Caribbean people already people of

a diaspora. I use this term here metaphorically, not literally:

diaspora does not refer us to those scattered tribes whose identity

can only be secured in relation to some sacred homeland to which

they must at all costs return, even if it means pushing other people

into the sea. This is the old, the imperialising, the hegemonising,

form of 'ethnicity'. We have seen the fate of the people of Palestine

at the hands of this backward-looking conception of diaspora - and

the complicity of the West with it. The diaspora experience as I

intend it here is defined, not by essence or purity, but by the

recognition of a necessary heterogeneity and diversity; by a

conception of 'identity' which lives with and through, not despite,

difference; by

 

 

hybridity.

Diaspora identities are those which are

constantly producing and reproducing themselves anew, through

transformation and difference. One can only think here of what is

uniquely - 'essentially' - Caribbean: precisely the mixes of colour,

235

Identity

pigmentation, physiognomic type; the 'blends' of tastes that is

Caribbean cuisine; the aesthetics of the 'cross-overs', of 'cut-andmix',

to borrow Dick Hebdige's telling phrase, which is the heart

and soul of black music. Young black cultural practitioners and

critics in Britain are increasingly coming to acknowledge and

explore in their work this 'diaspora aesthetic' and its formations in

the post-colonial experience:

Across a whole range of cultural forms there is a 'syncretic' dynamic

which critically appropriates elements from the master-codes of the

dominant culture and 'creolises' them, disarticulating given signs and

re-articulating their symbolic meaning. The subversive force of this

hybridising tendency is most apparent at the level of language itself

where Creoles, patois and black English decentre, destabilise and

carnivalise the linguistic domination of 'English' - the nation-language of

master-discourse - through strategic inflections, re-accentuations and

other performative moves in semantic, syntactic and lexical codes.

 

 

13

It is because this New World is constituted for us as place, a

narrative of displacement, that it gives rise so profoundly to a certain

imaginary plenitude, recreating the endless desire to return to 'lost

origins', to be one again with the mother, to go back to the

beginning. Who can ever forget, when once seen rising up out of

that blue-green Caribbean, those islands of enchantment. Who has

not known, at this moment, the surge of an overwhelming nostalgia

for lost origins, for 'times past? And yet, this 'return to the

beginning' is like the imaginary in Lacan - it can neither be fulfilled

nor requited, and hence is the beginning of the symbolic, of

representation, the infinitely renewable source of desire, memory,

myth, search, discovery - in short, the reservoir of our cinematic

narratives.

We have been trying, in a series of metaphors, to put in play a

different sense of our relationship to the past, and thus a different

way of thinking about cultural identity, which might constitute new

points of recognition in the discourses of the emerging Caribbean

cinema and black British cinemas. We have been trying to theorise

identity as constituted, not outside but within representation; and

hence of cinema, not as a second-order mirror held up to reflect

what already exists, but as that form of representation which is able

236

Cultural Identity and Diaspora

to constitute us as new kinds of subjects, and thereby enable us to

discover places from which to speak. Communities, Benedict

Anderson argues in

 

 

Imagined Communities

are to be distinguished,

not by their falsity/genuineness, but by the style in which they are

imagined.

 

 

14

This is the vocation of modern black cinemas: by

allowing us to see and recognise the different parts and histories of

ourselves, to construct those points of identification, those

positionalities we call in retrospect our 'cultural identities'.

We must not therefore be content with delving into the past of a people

in order to find coherent elements which will counteract colonialism's

attempts to falsify and harm ... A national culture is not a folk-lore, nor

an abstract populism that believes it can discover a people's true nature.

A national culture is the whole body of efforts made by a people in the

sphere of thought to describe, justify and praise the action through

which that people has created itself and keeps itself in existence.

 

 

15

Notes

1

 

 

Frantz Fanon, 'On National Culture', in The Wretched of the Earth,

London 1963,

pl70.

2

 

 

Ibid.,

pl76.

3

 

 

Christopher Norris, Deconstruction: Theory and Practice,

London 1982, p32.

4

 

 

Christopher Norris, Jacques Derrida,

London 1987, pl5.

5

 

 

Stuart Hall, Resistance Through Rituals,

London 1976.

6

 

 

Edward Said, Orientalism,

London 1985, p55.

7

 

 

Ibid.

8

 

 

Benedict Anderson,

Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Rise of

Nationalism,

 

 

London 1982.

9

 

 

Frantz Fanon, Black Skin, White Masks,

London 1986, pl09.

10

 

 

Homi Bhabha, 'Foreword' to Fanon, ibid.,

xv.

11

 

 

In New Formations,

no.3, Winter 1987.

12

 

 

Jamaica Hansard, vol.9, 1983-4, p363. Quoted in Hulme,

ibid.

13

 

 

Kobena Mercer, Diaspora Culture and the Dialogic Imagination', in M. Cham

and C. Watkins (eds),

 

 

Blackframes: Critical Perspectives on Black Independent

Cinema,

 

 

1988, p57.

14

 

 

Anderson, op.cit.,

pl5.

15

 

 

Fanon, op.cit.,

1963, pl88.

This piece was first published in the journal

 

 

Framework

(no.36) and is reproduced

by kind permission of the editor, Jim Pines.

237

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Repost0
11 avril 2010 7 11 /04 /avril /2010 20:22

 

 

En 1950, La Rue Cases-nègres reçoit le Prix des lecteurs.

 

2nd roman de Zobel. Il a 35 ans. roman de la maturité ?

 

Randolph Hezekiah, one of the few critics who has siriously studied Zobel, Joseph Zobel : the Mechanics of Liberation, Black Images, 1975

 

E. Julien, "La Métamorphose du récit dans la Rue Cases-Nègres", The French Review, 1987.link

 

Ann Armstrong Scarboro, "A Shift Toward The Inner Voice et Créolité in the French Caribbean Novel", Callalloo, vol 15, n°1, winter 1992, pp.12-29.

 

Hal Wylie, "Zobel's Use of Negritude and Social Realism" (article Jstor, vol 56, n°1, Winter 1982, p. 61-64), link

Sylvie Kandé, "Renunciation and Victory in Black Shack Alley", (article Jstor 1994, vol.5 n°2, summer),  link

 

 

Raymond Relouzat, Joseph Zobel, La Rue Cases-Nègres, début 70's, (localisation CRDP Martnique, côte FC 840.7 REL), à propos du style de Zobel , p.30 /

"Il suffit dès lors de pousser la recherche plus loin, ce que fait Zobel, et d'essayer de penser la réalité en créole, de l'évoquer en créole, de faire qu'elle se présente à vous sous le même angle que la langue française s'est présentée aux populations noires et esclaves des Antilles car c'est de cette appréhension oblique qu'est né le créole ; on crée alors spontanément des phrases comme celle-ci : "Lorsque le carillon de toutes les cloches déferla pour lâcher  les ppersonnes dont l'ontérieur était bourré ..." ou des images comparables à celles-ci : ..."sentir au fond de moi la convulsion des coups de tam tam, forts et doux comme un sang épais...", " J'essayais de me rappeler l'enfilade des choses."

Comme on le voit, Zobel a compris très tôt que le problème du style dans le roman antillais était d'abord celui de l'attitude face à la réalité antillaise et il a systématiquement poussé ses recherches dans ce sens, ainsi qu'en témogne tout ce qu'il a écrit et qui met en scène la Martinique et la société martiniquaise. Son oeuvre métropolitaine ne garde pas trace de cette manière qui est la sienne dans Diab-là  ou La Rue Cases-Nègres . Le style n'est donc pas une vertu, indifférente à l'espace et au temps, un constitutif permanent du romancier dans les manifestations de l'écriture ; il est une aptitude à faire que la réalité s'écrive elle-même. En conclusion, on peut dire que la traduction systématique de la phrase créole en français (traduction littérale, bien entendu) fait découvrir qu'il existe à la limite de l'intercompréhension entre deux francisants d'usage diddérents de très larges espaces, des zones de création stylistiqes d'une très grande richesse, et à peine explorées. c'est la seule voie, nous disons bien la seule, de l'authenticité. "

 

p.31 : Si Césaire ajoute à la vie artistique les préoccupations politiques et ses idéologies, Zobel non. "Pourquoi ? parce que pour lui, écrire, c'est déjà s'engager et s'engager complètement. ll est avant tout un artiste et il n'a jamais pensé devoir sacrifier cette vocation à l'engagement "sur le terrain" [...] La RCN apparaît dès lors comme un témoignage mais un témoignage placé d'emblée sous le signe du style pour tenter de faire surgir, quand même, de cet univers de misère et de malheur, un peu de beauté et de joie pures :"Qaund la journée avit été sans incident ni malheur, le soir arrivait, souriant de tendresse".

ITW de Zobel par Relouzat, p.32-33 : "Pour un écrivain, aucune expérience n'est stérile".

 

 

 

A PROPOS DU FILM RCN D'E. PALCY

aide du CNC : 1,9 Millions de francs soit 289 653 euros sur un budget total de 6 millions de francs (= 915 234 EUROS)

 

Pour RCN, équipe de Truffaut + prod SUMAFA, société basée en France

Pour obtenir les aides du CNC, EP a dû avancer 400 000 francs (60 980) accordés par la mairie de FDF

Partager cet article
Repost0
26 novembre 2009 4 26 /11 /novembre /2009 11:57
La lente invention des identités nationales
par Anne-Marie Thiesse 

A coups d’arguments historiques, qui remontent parfois à l’Antiquité ou au Moyen Age, nationalistes serbes et albanais se disputent la « propriété » du Kosovo. Tous semblent oublier que la nation est une création vieille d’à peine deux siècles qu’il fallut, au sens propre, « inventer » et ensuite consolider autour de mythes fondateurs et, souvent, à coup d’épurations ethniques.

Le regain récent des nationalismes en Europe reflète avant tout le retard du politique et la difficulté à forger de nouvelles identités collectives associées à un vrai projet politique.

« Les nations ne sont pas quelque chose d’éternel. Elles ont commencé, elles finiront. La confédération européenne, probablement, les remplacera. »  [1] La prédiction de Renan, vieille de plus d’un siècle, serait sur le point de se réaliser si la situation politique du Vieux Continent, en cette fin de siècle, n’apparaissait comme contradictoire. Alors que l’Union européenne, entrant dans sa phase de maturité, inaugure le dépassement de l’Etat-nation, les revendications nationalistes se multiplient, non seulement dans l’ex-Europe communiste mais aussi à l’Ouest, comme en Espagne, en Belgique ou au Royaume-Uni.

Le projet novateur porté par l’Union apparaît menacé par un double danger : la carence d’identité européenne, qui contraste avec la vigueur des identités nationales, et la fragmentation en micro-nations. Si le véritable enjeu des élections actuelles est bien l’alternative entre une Europe supranationale et une Union d’Etats- nations, alors des questions cruciales doivent être clairement posées : comment, dans le premier cas, faire naître un « peuple européen » sur lequel fonder la souveraineté supranationale et comment, dans le second, déterminer le nombre et la composition des Etats-nations formant l’Union ?

Les nations sont beaucoup plus jeunes que ne le racontent leurs histoires officielles. Pas de nation au sens moderne, c’est-à-dire politique, avant la révolution idéologique engagée au XVIIIe siècle qui confère au peuple la légitimité du pouvoir. La nation est conçue comme une communauté large, unie par un lien qui n’est ni la sujétion à un même monarque, ni l’appartenance à une même religion ou à un même état social. La nation ne procède pas du prince, elle est indépendante des aléas de l’histoire dynastique ou militaire. Formidable subversion, qui va permettre l’entrée dans l’âge démocratique, mais en justifiant l’avenir par la fidélité au passé.

En effet, pour passer de l’Europe des princes à l’Europe des nations, il a fallu convaincre de disparates ensembles de population que, malgré leurs évidentes différences, ils avaient une identité et que celle-ci était le fondement d’un intérêt collectif. La chose n’allait pas de soi. En 1800, l’identité commune d’un Junker prussien et d’un artisan bavarois, d’un noble magyar et d’un paysan de ses domaines, d’un bourgeois florentin et d’un berger calabrais n’avait rien d’évident. Elle paraissait beaucoup moins assurée, en tout cas, que les identités fondées sur le statut social, la religion, l’appartenance à un espace local plus ou moins restreint. Pour faire naître les Allemands, les Hongrois, les Italiens, il a fallu précisément postuler une communauté de naissance et la continuité à travers les âges de la filiation.

Il est devenu usuel aujourd’hui d’opposer les conceptions « à la française » et « à l’allemande » de la nation, l’une fondée sur l’adhésion libre et rationnelle des individus à un collectif politique, l’autre privilégiant l’appartenance déterministe à un ensemble organique. L’une et l’autre ont cependant toujours été associées dans la construction des nations européennes, même si elles le furent inégalement selon les contextes politiques et sociaux. La récitation du « Nos ancêtres les Gaulois » et l’apprentissage d’une histoire nationale unitaire et bimillénaire gommant la disparité des histoires régionales ont été intimement associés, dans la formation des écoliers français, à l’enseignement de leurs droits et devoirs de citoyens.

Constructions parallèles

PARADOXALEMENT, ce qui rapproche peut-être le plus les Européens, c’est que leurs aïeux des deux derniers siècles ont travaillé en commun à fabriquer des identités nationales, toutes spécifiques, certes, mais similaires dans leur différence. On sait bien établir la liste des éléments symboliques et matériels que doit présenter une véritable nation : une histoire établissant sa continuité à travers les âges, une série de héros parangons des valeurs nationales, une langue, des monuments culturels, un folklore, des lieux de mémoire et un paysage typique, une mentalité particulière et des identifications pittoresques - costume, spécialités culinaires ou animal emblématique.

Les nations qui ont accédé récemment à la reconnaissance politique, et plus encore celles qui en sont encore à la revendiquer, témoignent bien, par la mise en avant systématique de tous ces éléments, du caractère prescriptif de la « liste identitaire ». Mais, en 1800, on n’en était qu’aux premières ébauches de la fabrication des « communautés imaginées » [2], pour reprendre l’expression de Benedict Anderson. C’est par l’observation mutuelle, l’imitation, le transfert d’idées et de savoir-faire que les intellectuels européens des différentes nations ont forgé, au cours du XIXe siècle, ce modèle commun de production des identités. La rédaction des premières histoires nationales d’inspiration libérale, la notion de monuments historiques, la conception des collectes ethnographiques, la peinture de paysages emblématiques sont issues de ce commerce symbolique.

La mise au point des langues nationales, progressivement substituées à la bigarrure des dialectes, a relevé également, pour l’essentiel, de procédures communes. Il y a eu même des opérations d’« assistance identitaire » à l’égard des nations présentant, de par leur situation politique, un déficit initial d’intellectuels autochtones : les lettrés allemands, français, anglais ou russes ont prêté leur concours à la fondation des identités nationales dans les Balkans se dégageant de l’Empire ottoman. La constitution d’un patrimoine culturel des Slaves du Sud et la formation du serbo-croate ont commencé avec l’appui de lettrés autrichiens et allemands, dont le célèbre philologue Jakob Grimm. L’érudit français Claude Fauriel, peu après le massacre de Chio (1822), s’est attaché à prouver que les Grecs modernes avaient bien une véritable identité nationale et un patrimoine culturel indubitablement hérité des Grecs de l’Antiquité. Cette sollicitude peut sembler étrange : mais c’est que dans une première phase, jusqu’en 1848 au moins, le combat pour la nation et la constitution des identités se confond en bonne part avec le combat pour la liberté et la modernité, contre l’absolutisme monarchique et les vestiges de la féodalité. Toute avancée faite ici ou là peut apparaître bénéfique à tous.

La perspective change lorsque la lutte semble sur le point d’être remportée, et les revendications d’Etats indépendants sur base nationale près d’aboutir. Un problème se pose alors concrètement : comment définir le territoire de la nation et fixer ses frontières ? A la différence des monarchies et des empires, les nations ne peuvent invoquer le droit de conquête. C’est seulement au nom de la possession du sol par les ancêtres qu’elles peuvent revendiquer un territoire. Une nation digne de ce nom ne se représente jamais comme agressive envers les nations voisines : elle ne fait que défendre son patrimoine inaliénable et son droit à la liberté, avec bonheurs et malheurs (ce qui explique que les nations puissent aussi bien commémorer leurs défaites que leurs victoires).

L’histoire, l’ethnographie, la philologie sont donc convoquées pour établir les titres de propriété nationale sur des territoires qui, au fil du temps, ont vu coexister ou se succéder des populations différentes. Comme l’indiquait avec irritation l’anthropologue Marcel Mauss à propos des controverses qui eurent lieu au moment du redécoupage de l’Europe, après la première guerre mondiale, « il est presque comique de voir des faits de folklore mal connus, mal étudiés, invoqués devant la conférence de la paix comme preuve que telle ou telle nation doit s’étendre ici ou là parce qu’on y retrouve encore telle ou telle forme de maison ou tel bizarre usage »  [3]. Les conflits sont d’autant plus inextricables qu’il est difficile, selon le principe national, de poser une date de prescription en matière d’ancienneté d’occupation du territoire : ce serait avaliser la prise de possession par un envahisseur ou bien par un peuple tiers profitant de l’abandon forcé du sol par ses occupants antérieurs.

Les nationalistes serbes accusent les Albanais de s’être installés au Kosovo en tirant parti de la défaite du royaume serbe face à l’Empire ottoman. Réponse des nationalistes albanais : leurs propres ancêtres, désignés comme fondateurs de leur nation, les Illyriens, occupaient le terrain des siècles avant les invasions slaves dans la péninsule balkanique. La surenchère dans l’antériorité de présence des aïeux a fini même au XXe siècle par faire entrer l’archéologie et l’anthropologie physique dans les sciences à possible usage nationaliste (comme on l’a vu au Proche-Orient, dans le débat qui oppose Israéliens et Palestiniens). Elles ont été enrôlées, entre autres, dans l’affrontement portant sur les véritables possesseurs de la Transylvanie. Les Roumains se sont donné pour grands ancêtres les Daces, romanisés après leur défaite devant les armées impériales et immortalisés sur les bas-reliefs de la colonne Trajane. La construction de l’identité roumaine a d’ailleurs particulièrement mis en avant la latinité de la langue, épurée de ses éléments slaves, et transcrite à partir de 1848 en alphabet romain. Alors que les Roumains insistent sur l’occupation ininterrompue et bimillénaire par leurs aïeux d’un territoire incluant la Transylvanie, les Hongrois contestent la continuité entre Daces et Roumains et soulignent que la présence de Roumains en Transylvanie n’est attestée que plusieurs siècles après l’installation des ancêtres des Hongrois. La « guerre des Daces », commencée il y a deux siècles, se poursuit dans les publications académiques et sur sites Internet.

De la première guerre mondiale est née la Société des nations, de la seconde l’Organisation des Nations unies : nations et non pas Etats. Car la nation est, au XXe siècle, tenue pour le seul fondement légitime de l’Etat, sur l’ensemble de la planète. Les combats contre les colonisateurs européens ont été menés par des fronts ou des mouvements de libération nationale, et toute revendication sécessionniste au sein d’un Etat passe désormais par la proclamation d’existence d’une nation spécifique et opprimée.

Pourtant, la constitution des Etats-nations est confrontée à un problème majeur : comment, justement, faire coïncider Etat et nation ? Précisons que le « principe des nationalités », régulièrement invoqué depuis le XIXe siècle pour attester d’un découpage politique de l’espace sur base démocratique, est une formule d’éthique universelle séduisante qui masque les rapports de force économiques et militaires à l’oeuvre dans la formation des Etats. Au demeurant, quand bien même ce principe serait respecté, la question ne serait pas résolue pour autant. Tout espace étatique est, a priori, hétérogène, rassemblant des populations qui peuvent se réclamer d’appartenances nationales diverses.

Mais des solutions existent pour homogénéiser nationalement l’Etat. La plus violente consiste à expulser ce que l’on appelle les minorités nationales. Les tragiques « épurations ethniques » dans l’ex-Yougoslavie sont les plus récents exemples de ces opérations qui ont été utilisées fréquemment au cours du siècle : que l’on songe aux « échanges » massifs de population entre Grèce et Turquie après la première guerre mondiale, à l’exclusion des Allemands des Sudètes de la Tchécoslovaquie après la seconde - en réponse à la revendication et à l’annexion de la région par les nazis -, et, surtout, à l’exécution hitlériennne d’une Allemagne Judenrein. Les extrêmes droites contemporaines n’hésitent pas, d’ailleurs, à s’inscrire dans cette continuité quand elles réclament l’expulsion des populations immigrées comme opération de salut national.

Mais d’autres entreprises ont été menées pour réaliser l’homogénéité nationale des Etats. Elles ont consisté à nier l’existence de nations diverses au sein de l’Etat, par des politiques utilisant, selon les cas, coercition ou inculcation du sentiment d’appartenance à une unité. La coercition est allée souvent de pair avec l’absence d’un fonctionnement démocratique, fût-il minimal, au sein de l’Etat : « magyarisation » forcée des minorités slaves dans la partie hongroise de l’Empire austro-hongrois après le compromis de 1867, répression des revendications d’autonomie régionale dans l’Espagne franquiste, ou, plus récemment, « bulgarisation » forcée, portant jusqu’aux patronymes, de la minorité turque par le pouvoir communiste agonisant de Sofia.

L’inculcation du sentiment d’unité nationale, dans les Etats démocratiques, physiquement moins brutale, a fait l’objet d’une vaste et longue pédagogie de masse. L’école, bien sûr, a été la pièce maîtresse de ce dispositif, mais il s’est étendu à l’ensemble de la vie quotidienne des individus, dans les activités les plus ordinaires aussi bien que les loisirs (sportifs, notamment) et les fêtes publiques qui se multiplient au XXe siècle et mettent en scène la célébration de l’identité collective. L’unification n’implique pas alors la négation de la diversité mais elle établit une intégration hiérarchisante : tout ce qui est sur le territoire de l’Etat relève de la nation, et toute particularité locale n’a de sens et de légitimité que dans ce cadre.

Des tentatives ont été faites, au XIXe siècle, pour construire des identités nationales en Bretagne ou dans les pays d’oc, et elles ont bien suivi le modèle européen commun (codification de la langue, écriture d’une histoire continue et spécifique, valorisation de monuments culturels et historiques). Le contexte économique, politique et social étant peu propice à leur réussite, elles ont été reformulées dans le cadre de l’Etat-nation français comme identités régionales, composantes estimables de l’identité nationale mais subordonnées à elle  [4]. La violence qui s’exerce dans ce dernier cas d’homogénisation du national est plutôt d’ordre symbolique puisqu’elle passe non par l’éradication des identités locales mais par leur déclassement. Qu’elle puisse être dénoncée, à la fin du XXe siècle, comme opération de « génocide culturel » appelant réparation est l’un des signes d’une crise de confiance générale sur la capacité des Etats-nations existants à garantir les droits des citoyens.

La nation a été conçue comme une fraternité laïque, tout à la fois instance protectrice, porteuse d’exigences démocratiques, et idéal suprême justifiant au besoin qu’on lui sacrifiât sa vie. Cependant, la révolution industrielle, dont les prémisses sont contemporaines de la naissance du principe national, a fait naître de nouveaux groupes sociaux et des aspirations politiques concurrentes. Une nouvelle identité collective a été construite à partir du milieu du XIXe siècle : l’internationalisme sur base de classe contre l’union nationale sur base interclasses. De cet antagonisme qui constitue l’un des axes principaux de l’histoire européenne du XXe siècle, il semble que la nation soit sortie victorieuse. Echec sans doute des tentatives faites pour substituer au capitalisme un autre mode de production. Mais puissance aussi de l’idée nationale comme communauté solidaire assurant à chaque individu une place qui ne soit pas déterminée exclusivement par son statut économique.

C’est dans le cadre des Etats-nations démocratiques qu’ont pu être menés les combats pour l’obtention de droits nouveaux des citoyens, garantis par la puissance publique, et une relative redistribution des richesses. Du coup, lorsque, à la fin du XXe siècle, la mondialisation du capitalisme restreint le contrôle des Etats sur la production des richesses et leur répartition, la nation apparaît comme un refuge, sa disparition une terrible menace pour la cohésion sociale et les conditions d’existence des plus démunis.

Alors que le nationalisme avait été discrédité par les effroyables massacres dont l’Europe fut le théâtre durant les deux guerres mondiales, l’attachement au national connaît un puissant retour de flamme. Et les micro- nationalismes occidentaux qui surgissent au sein d’Etats-nations constitués expriment sans doute la croyance qu’une refondation étatique sur la base d’une nation plus « authentique » permettra de mieux garantir les intérêts et les droits des citoyens - surtout, d’ailleurs, si la micro- nation dispose sur son territoire d’un fort potentiel économique. Notons d’ailleurs que le respect du droit des nations à l’indépendance étatique, assez peu observé jusqu’à présent, peut favoriser le surgissement d’une quantité encore imprévisible de petites nations - et de minorités nationales - sur le Vieux Continent : le mode de construction d’une identité nationale est suffisamment au point pour être mis en oeuvre rapidement, comme en témoigne, en Italie, l’invention de la Padanie par M. Umberto Bossi. Retard du politique

DANS l’Europe ex-communiste, l’effondrement soudain du système a posé en urgence la reconstitution d’un lien social à partir duquel rebâtir la société civile, poser la notion d’intérêt collectif et définir la légitimité du pouvoir. Le recours à l’idée nationale était mobilisable à cette fin, dans une perspective démocratique. Mais il s’est révélé tout aussi utilisable pour une fuite en avant, où l’exacerbation des haines nationalistes permettait de masquer les désastres économiques, la criminalisation de la vie publique et l’appauvrissement dramatique de la population. Catastrophe préparée d’ailleurs par les dernières décennies des pouvoirs communistes, qui avaient entrepris de dévoyer les revendications de démocratisation en excitant les passions nationalistes, au point qu’on a pu parler, notamment pour la Roumanie de Ceausescu ou l’Albanie d’Enver Hoxha, de régimes nationaux-communistes  [5].

Les nations ne sont pas éternelles. La vigueur actuelle des nationalismes marque peut-être plutôt le retard du politique sur l’économique. La nation, dans son sens moderne, est apparue alors que s’engageait une profonde mutation économique et technologique. Elle a été la force de cohésion qui a permis d’élaborer une organisation politique et sociale à la mesure de changements qui ont bouleversé totalement le mode de vie des populations. Une autre mutation radicale s’amorce, pour laquelle la nation n’est sans doute plus appropriée. Cela n’a rien de tragique, à condition qu’une nouvelle force de cohésion garante de démocratie vienne la remplacer. Celle-là ne sera pas produite automatiquement par les futures formes de la vie économique. La soumission aux forces du marché, on veut le croire, n’est d’ailleurs pas le destin auquel nous sommes condamnés. L’histoire des nations montre bien que la formation d’une identité collective est une construction militante, associée à un projet politique.

Anne-Marie Thiesse
Le Monde diplomatique, juin 1999

Notes

[*] Anne-Marie Thiesse est auteure de La Création des identités nationales : Europe XVIIIe-XXe siècle, édition Le Seuil, Paris, 1999 ; rééd. Points-Seuil.

[1] Ernest Renan, « Qu’est-ce qu’une nation ? », conférence faite en Sorbonne le 11 mars 1882.

[2] Benedict Anderson, L’Imaginaire national, La Découverte, Paris, 1996.

[3] Marcel Mauss, « Nations, nationalités, internationalisme », dans OEuvres, Minuit, Paris, 1969.

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A Chronological Listing of Publications (1964-)

1957
‘Editorial” Universities & Left Review issue 1, , Stuart Hall, Gabriel
Pearson, Ralph Samuel and Charles Taylor (eds.), Oxford.

1958
‘The New Conservatism’, ULR 1, op.cit.
1958
break-through, Combined Universities Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, Oxford,
1958.
N.A.T.O. and the Alliances, London Regional Council Discussion Pamphlet, London,
1958.
‘The deep sleep of England’, Universities & Left Review, issue 3 London, Winter 1958.
‘Inside the Whale Again’, Universities & Left Review, issue 4, Stuart Hall, Gabriel Pearson, Ralph Samuel and Charles Taylor (eds.), London, Summer 1958.
“Big Sir and the Oranges and Lemons”, Universities and Left Review, 4, op.cit.
“Mr Raymond and the Dead Souls” Universities and Left Review 4, op.cit.

1959
‘A Sense of Classnessness’, Universities & Left Review, issue 5., op.cit.
‘Editorial: ULR to New Left Review’, Universities & Left Review issue 7, op.cit.
“Absolute Beginnings’, Universities & Left Review, issue 7, Stuart
Hall, Gabriel Pearson, Ralph Samuel, Charles Taylor Michael Barratt-Brown, Norman Birnbaum, Alan Hall, Michael Kullman, Alan Lovell, Alasdair and MacIntyre (eds.), London, Autumn 1959.
‘The Big Swipe’, Universities & Left Review issue 7, op.cit.

1960
‘The Supply of Demand’, in Out of Apathy, E P Thompson (ed.), New Left Books,
Stevens and Sons Ltd., London, 1960.
Editorial’, New Left Review issue 1. Stuart Hall (ed). London, 1960
‘Serjeant Musgrave’s Dance’, New Left Review, issue 1, Stuart Hall (ed.), London
1960.
‘Crosland Territory’, New Left Review, issue 2, Stuart Hall (ed.), London
1960.
‘Lady Chatterley’s Lover’, New Left Review, issue 6, Stuart Hall (ed.), London
1960.


1961
‘Student Journals’, New Left Review, issue 7, Stuart Hall (ed.), London
1961.
‘Notes on the Cuban Dilemma’ with Norm Fruchter, New Left Review, issue 9, Stuart Hall (ed.), London, 1961.
‘The Politics of The Common Market’ with Perry Anderson, New Left Review issue 10, Stuart Hall (ed), 1961
‘Commitment Dilemma’ New Left Review, issue 10, Stuart Hall (ed.), London
1961.


1963
“The Cuban Crisis: Trial-run or Steps Towards Peace?” in War and Peace, vol.1, no.1, Jan-March. The CND Quarterly, Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, London

1964
The Popular Arts, S.Hall and P.Whannel, London: Hutchinson; and Boston: Beacon Press, 1964.

1966
'The formation of political consciousness', The Committed Church, Simon Clements and Lawrence Bright (eds.). Darton, Longman and Todd, 1966.
'’Class and the mass media', in Class: A Symposium, Richard Mabey (ed.), London: Blond, 1966.

1967
1967, New Left May Day Manifesto, edited by Stuart Hall, Raymond Williams, Edward Thompson. London 1967.
'’Cultural analysis', Cambridge Review, 89, 1967.
'The world of the gossip column', Your Sunday Paper, R. Hoggart (ed.), London University Press, 68, 109, 1967.
'People, personalities, and personalisation', Writers and their Work , R. Hoggart (ed.), London University Press, 68, 109, 1967.
The Young Englanders, National Committee of Commonwealth Immigrants, London, 1967.


1968
The May Day Manifesto 1968, Raymond Williams (ed)., Penguin Special, Penguin Books, Harmondsworth, Middlesex.
‘The New Revolutionaries’, in From Culture to Revolution, Terry Eagleton and Brian Wicker (eds.), Sheed and Ward, London, Sydney, 1968.

1969
'The Hippies, an American Moment' in Student Power, J.Nagel (ed.),London: Merlin Press, 1969.
'Popular Press and Social Change', Rowntree Report, 1969.


1970
'Black Britons', Community, 1, No's 2 and 3, 1970.
'Riflessioni sull'informazione in Gran Breragna', Informazione Radio TV, Rome: RAI, No.12 (translated reprint), 1970.
'A World at One with Itself', New Society, no.403, 1970.
'Leisure, Entertainment and Mass Communication', Society and Leisure, no.2, 1970.

1971
'Introduction', 'Response to People and Culture', Working Papers in Cultural Studies, no.1, 1971.
'Life and Death of Picture Post', Cambridge Review, vol.92, no.2201, 1971.
'Innovation and Decline in Cultural Programming on Television', UNESCO Report: CCCS, 1971.
'Le role des programmes culturels dans la television britannique', in Essais sur les mass media et la culture, Paris: UNESCO, 1971.
'People and culture: a critique', Working Papers in Cultural Studies, 1, Birmingham: CCCS, 1971.
'Deviancy, Politics and the Media', in Deviancy and Social Control, M. McIntosh and P. Rock (eds.), London, Tavistock., 1971.

1972
'The Social Eye of Picture Post', Working Papers in Cultural Studies, no.2, 1972.
'The Determination of News Photographs', Working Papers in Cultural Studies, no.3. Reprinted in The Manufacture of News (1973), S.Cohen and J.Young, London: Constable, 1972.
'The Limitations of Broadcasting', Listener, vol.16, 1972.
'External/Internal Dialectic in Broadcasting', in Fourth Symposium on Broadcasting, Dept. of Extra-Mural Studies, University of Manchester, 1972.
'The Hippies: dissent in America', in P.Worsley (ed.), Problems of Modern Society. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1972.
'Black Britons', in E.Butterworth and D.Weir, (eds.), Social problems of modern Britain., London: Fontana, 1972.

1973
Situating Marx, S.Hall and P.Walton, 1973.
'Introduction', in P.Walton and S.Hall (eds.), Situating Marx, London: Human Context Books, 1973.
'The Structured Communication of Events', in Obstacles to Communication Symposium, UNESCO, Paris, 1973.
'Deviancy, Politics and the Media', in M.MacIntosh and P.Rock (eds.), Deviancy and Social Control, London: Tavistock, 1973.
'Encoding and Decoding in the Media Discourse', stencilled paper no.7, Brimingham, CCCS, 1973.
'The Limitations of Broadcasting', The Second Listener Anthology, 1973.
'The television discourse', in Criteria and functions of television criticism (Prix Italia; proceedings), Turin: Edizioni Radiotelevisione Italiana, 1973.

1974
'Marx's Notes on Method: A 'Reading' of the '1857 Introduction'', Working papers in Cultural Studies, no.6, 1974.
'Education and the Crisis of the Urban School', in J.Raynor (ed.), Issues in Urban Education, Milton Keynes: Open University Press, 1074.
'Encoding and Decoding in the Television Discourse', Culture and Education, no.25, Council of Europe, Strassburg, 1974.
'Media Power: the Double Bind', Journal of Communication, vol.24, no.4, 1974.
'Television Violence: Crime, Drama and the Analysis of Content', S.Hall, A.Shuttleworth, C.Heck and A.Lloyd, Brimingham, CCCS, 1974.
'Encoding and Decoding', Broadcasters and the Audience, Venice, 1974.
'Between two worlds', in T.Barker (ed.), The Long March of Everyman, London: Andre Deutch, 1974.

1975
'The 'Structured Communication' of Events', in Getting the Message Across, UNESCO, Paris, 1975.
'Africa is Alive and Well and Living in the Diaspora', UNESCO, Paris, 1975.
'Television as a Medium and Its Relation to Culture', Birmingham, CCCS, 1975.
'Newsmaking and Crime', S.Hall, C.Critcher, J.Clarke, T.Jefferson and B.Roberts, stencilled paper no.27, Birmingham, CCCS, 1975.
'Introduction', to A.C.Smith, Paper Voices: the Popular Press and Social Change, 1935-1965, London: Chatto and Windus, 1975.
'Television, violence and crime', in Research Methods and Results Concerning the Relationship between Violence, Television, and Criminality. Florence: Prix Italia, 1975.
'Newsmaking and crime', in Journalism, broadcasting and urban crime, London: NACRO, 1975.
'News and current affairs television', in Proceedings of the XXVII Prix Italia, Media Research Conference, Florence: Editiones Radio-Television Italiana, 1975.
Mugging and Law 'n Order, S.Hall and T.Jefferson, Birmingham:CCCS No.36, 1975.

1976
'Subcultures, Cultures and Class: A Theoretical overview', S.Hall, J.Clarke, T.Jefferson and B.Roberts, Working Papers in Cultural Studies, no.7/8, 1976.
'Introduction', to D.Selbourne, An Eye on China, London: Black Liberation Press, 1976.
Resistance through Rituals: Youth Subcultures in Post-War Britain, S.Hall and T.Jefferson, London: Hutchinson, 1976.
'Television and Culture', Sight and Sound, vol.45, no.4, London, 1976.
'Violence and the mass media', in N.Tutt (ed.), Violence, London: HMSO, 1976.
'Literature, Society and the Sociology of Literature: A Critical Survey', in Literature, Society, the Sociology of Literature: Proceedings of the Conference, Essex, July 1976, F.Barker, P.Hulme et al (eds.), The University of Essex, 1976.
'Economic determinations on television fiction production', in Proceedings of the XXVIII Prix Italia Research Seminar on Organization and Structure of Fiction in Television Production., Bologna:ERI/Radiotelevisione Italiana, 1976.
'Broadcasting, Politics and the State: the Independent - impartiality couplet', Paper to 10th International Association for Mass Communication Research, University of Leicester, 1976.
‘A critical survey’ in literature, society and the sociology of literature, University of Essex, 1976.

1977
'The 'Unity' of Current Affairs Television', S.Hall, I.Connell and L.Carti, Working papers in Cultural Studies, no.9, 1977.
'The Hinterland of Science: Ideology and the "Sociology of Knowledge"', Working Papers in Cultural Studies, no.10, 1977.
'Politics and Ideology: Gramsci', S.Hall, B.Lumley and G.McLennan, Working Papers in Cultural Studies, no.10, 1977.
'Culture, the Media, and the "Ideological Effect"', in J Curran et al. (eds.), Mass Communication and Society, London: Edward Arnold, 1977.
'Rethinking the "Base and Superstructure" Metaphor,' in J Bloomfield et al. (eds.), Class, Hegemony and Party, London: Lawrence and Wishart, 1977.
'Journalism of the Air under Review', Journalism Studies Review, vol.1, no.1, 1977.
'The "Political" and the "Economic" in Marxist Theory of Classes', in A.Hunt (ed.) Class and Class Structure, London: Lawrence and Wishart, 1977.
'A Critical Survey of the Theoretical and Practical Achievements of the Last Ten Years', in F.Barker et al. (eds.) Literature, Society and the Sociology of Literature, University of Essex, 1977.
'Developments in British youth culture', Teaching London Kids, 10, 1977.
'Uber die arbeit das centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies', Gulliver No. 2. Deutsch-Englishche Jahrbucher 2, Berlin:Argument Verlag, 1977.
Schooling and Society: A Review of Theories, Milton Keynes: Open University Press, 1977.

1978
On Ideology, S.Hall, B.Lumley and G.McLennan (eds.), London: Hutchinson,1978.
'Politics and Ideology: Gramsci', S.Hall, B Lumley and G.McLennan, in On Ideology, op.cit. 1978.
'The Political' and 'The Economic' in Marx's Theory of Classes', in (ed.) A.Hunt, Class and Class Structure, London: Lawrence and Wishart. Reprinted (1980) in (eds.) R.Bocock et al, An Introduction to Sociology, Fontana, 1978.
Policing the Crisis: "Mugging" the State and Law and Order, S.Hall, C.Critcher, T.Jefferson, J.Clarke and B.Roberts, London: Macmillan, 1978.
'Response to Rosalind Coward', S.Hall, I.Connell, J.Curti, I.Chambers and T.Jefferson, Screen, no.4, 1978.
'Marxism and Culture', Radical History Review, no.18, 1978.
'The Treatment of "Football Hooliganism" in the Press', in R.Ingram (ed.), Football Hooliganism: the Wider Context, London: Inter-Action, 1978.
'Newspapers, Politics and Classes', in J.Curran (ed.), The British Press, London: Macmillan, 1978.
'The Television Feuilleon and the Domestication of the World', in The Feuilleon in Television, Proceedings of the Pri-Italia Conference, Venice: ERI, 1978.
'Pluralism, race and class in Caribbean society', in Race and Class in Post-Colonial Society, Paris:UNESCO, 1978.
'Racism and reaction', in Five Views of Multi-Racial Britain, London: Commission on Racial Equality, 1978.
'Race and poverty', in T.Blair (ed.), The Inner Cities, London: Central London Polytechnic papers on the environment, 1978.
'Developments in British Youth Cultures', Hard Times, Nos.3/4. Berlin: Deutsch-Britishen Gesellschaft, 1978.
'Die soziale optik der "Picture Post"', in E.Nierlich (ed.), Fremdsprachliche Literaturwissenschaft und Massenmedien, Meisenheim am Glan:Verlag Anton Hain, 1978.
'The Racist Within', The Listener, 20/7/78.

1979
'The Great Moving Right Show', Marxism Today, January, 1979.
'Some Problems with the Ideology/Subject Couplet', Ideology and Consciousness, no.3, 1979.
'Cultures of Resistance and "Moral Panics"', Afras Review, University of Sussex, Autumn, 1979.

1980
‘Reformism and the Legislation of Consent’ in (eds) J. Clarke, M. Fitzgerals et.al., Remissiveness and control. Macmillans and the National Deviancy Conference. 1980
'Cultural Studies: Two Paradigms', Media, Culture and Society, no.2, 1980.
'Popular-Democratic vs. Authoritarian-Populism: Two Ways of 'Taking Democracy Seriously'', in A.Hunt (ed.), Marxism and Democracy, London: Lawrence and Wishart, 1980.
Culture, Media, Language, S.Hall, D.Dobson, A.Lowe and P.Willis (eds.), London: Hutchinson, 1980.
'Cultural Studies and the Centre: Some Problematics and Problems', 'Introduction to Media Studies at the Center', 'Encoding/Decoding', and 'Recent Developments in Theories of Language and Ideology', Culture, Media, Language, London: Hutchinson, 1980.
'Nicos Poulantzas: State, Power, Socialism', New Left Review, no.119, 1980.
Drifting into a Law and Order Society, The 1980 Cobden Trust Lecture, Cobden Trust, London, 1980.
'Thatcherism-A New Stage?', Marxism Today, February, 1980.
'Race, Articulation, and Societies Structured in Dominance', in Sociological Theories: Race and Colonialism, UNESCO: Paris, 1980.
'The Raymond Williams Interviews', Screen Education, no.34, 1980.
'Race, Class and Ideology', Das Argurment, July 1980.

1981
'Notes on Deconstructing "the Popular"', in R.Samuel (ed.), People's History and Socialist Theory, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1981.
'In Defense of Theory', in R.Samuel (ed.), People's History and Socialist Theory, London, Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1981.
'The "Little Caesars" of Social Democracy', Marxism Today, April, 1981.
'Moving Right', Socialist Review, no.55. 1981.
'Representations of Race in the Media: Viewpoint 2', Multi-Racial Education, Vol.9, No.2, 1981.
'Law, Class and Control', with P.Scraton in Crime and Society (ed.) M.Fitzgerald et al, Routledge and Kegan Paul, London, 1981.

1982
'The Rediscovery of "Ideology"; Return of the Repressed in Media Studies', in M.Gurevitch, T.Bennett, J.Curran and S.Woollacott (eds.), Culture, Society and the Media, London: Methuen, 1982.
'A Long Haul', Marxism Today, November, 1982.
'Redrawing the Map', Marxism Today, December, 1982.
'The Empire Strikes Back', New Socialist, July/August, 1982.
'Culture and the State', in Popular Culture, Open University, 1982.
'The Battle for Socialist Ideas in the 1980s', Socialist Register, 1982.

1983
'The Problem of Ideology - Marxism without Guarantees', in B.Matthews (ed.), Marx 100 years On, London: Lawrence and Wishart, 1983.
The Politics of Thatcherism, S.Hall and M.Jacques, London: Lawrence and Wishart, 1983.
'Whistling in the Void', New Socialist, May/June, London, 1983.
'Teaching Race', Early Child Development, Vol.10, No.4, London, 1983.
'Construction of Race in the Media', Das Argument, No.134, Berlin, 1983.

1984
'Reconstruction Work', Ten 8, no.16, Birmingham, 1984.
'The Culture Gap', Marxism Today, January, 1984.
'The Narrative Construction of Reality, Southern Review, vol.17, no.1, 1984.
The Idea of the Modern State, G.McLennan, D.Held and S.Hall (eds.), Milton Keynes: Open University Press, 1984.
State and Society in Contemporary Britain, G.McLennan, S.Hall and D.Held (eds.), Cambridge: Polity Press. 1984.
'The State in Question', in The Idea of the Modern State, op.cit., Milton Keynes: Open University Press, 1984.
'The Rise of the Representative/Interventionist State', in State and Society in Contemporary Britain, op.cit., New York: Polity Press, 1984.
'Labour's Love Still Lost', New Socialist , January/February, 1984.
'Face the Future', New Socialist, September, 1984.
'The Crisis of Labourism', in J.Curran (ed.), The Future of the Left, Cambridge: Polity Press, 1984.
'Conjuring Leviathan: Orwell on the State', in C.Norris (ed.), Inside the Myth-Orwell: Views from the Left, London: Lawrence and Wishart, 1984.
'The State - Socialism's Old Caretaker', Marxism Today, January, 1984.
'Education in Crisis', in Is There Anyone Here from Education?, Donald and Wolpe (eds.), Pluto Press, 1984.

1985
'Signification, Representation, Ideology: Althusser and the Post-Structuralist Debates', Critical Studies in Mass Communication, vol.2, no.2, 1985.
'Faith, Hope and Clarity', Marxism Today, January, 1985.
'Authoritarian Populism: A Reply to Jessop et al.', New Left Review, no.151, 1985.
'Realignment - For What?', Marxism Today, December, 1985.
'The Role of Intellectual is to Produce Crisis: A Conversation with Umberto Eco', Listener, May 16, 1985.
'Cold, Comfort, Farm' New Socialist, November, 1985.
'State and Society, 1880-1930', S.Hall and B.Schwartz in M.Langan and B.Schwartz (eds.), Crises in the British State, 1880-1930, London: Hutchinson, 1985.
'Religious Ideology and Social Movements in Jamaica', in R.Bocock and K.Thompson (eds.), Religion and Ideology, Manchester University Press, 1985.

1986
'Media Power and Class Power' in Bending Reality, (ed.) J.Curran et al, Pluto, 1986.
'Gramsci's Relevance for the Study of Race and Ethnicity', Journal of Communication Inquiry, vol. 10, no.2, 1986.
'The Problem of Ideology: Marxism without Guarantees' in Journal of Communication Inquiry, op cit. 1986.
'On Postmodernism and Articulation: An Interview with Stuart Hall', Journal of Communication Inquiry, vol.10, no.2, 1986.
Politics and Ideology, S.Hall and J.Donald (eds.), Milton Keynes: The Open University, 1986.
'Variants of Liberalism', in Politics and Ideology, op.cit., Milton Keynes: Open University Press, 1986.
'Introduction' to W.F.Haug, Commodity Aesthetics, Ideology and Culture, New York: International General, 1986.
'Popular Culture and the State' in T.Bennett, C.Mercer and J.Woollacott (eds.), Popular Culture and Social Relations, Milton Keynes: Open University Press, 1986.
'People Aid: A New Politics Sweeps the Land', S.Hall and M.Jacques, Marxism Today, July, 1986.
'Cultural Studies: Two Paradigms' in Media, Culture and Society, (ed.) R.Collins et al, Sage, 1986.
'Absolutism And Other Ancestors', with J.Anderson (ed.) in Anderson, The Rise of the Modern State, Harvester, Brighton, 1986.

1987
'The Toad in the Garden: Thatcherism amongst the Theorists', and 'Stuart Hall: Question and Answer', in C.Nelson and L.Grossberg (eds.), Marxism and the Interpretation of Culture, Urbana: University of Illinois Press and London: Macmillan, 1987.
'Introduction' to J.Hargreaves, Sports and Power, New York: International General, 1987.
'Popular Culture as a Factor of Intercultural Understanding' in Human Rights Teaching, vol.vi, UNESCO, Paris, 1987.
Pictures of Everyday Life, S.Hall and Noelle Goldman, Camelia/Methuen: London, 1987.
'Gramsci and Us', Marxism Today, 1987.
‘Kodowanie i dekoduanie’, Przekazy I Opinie, 1/2, (47/48). (p.58-72)

1988
'Migration from the English-Speaking Caribbean to the UK, 1950-80' in Reginald Appleyard (ed.), International Migration Today, vol.1: Trends and Prospects, UNESCO (Paris) University of Western Austalia, 1988.
'New Ethnicities' in Black Film, British Cinema, British Film Institute/Institute for Contemporary Arts, Document 7, 1988.
'Minimal Selves' in Identity: The Real Me, ICA Document 6, 1988.
The Hard Road To Renewal: Thatcherism and the Crisis of the Left, Verso, 1988.
'The Work of Art in the Electronic Age', in Block, no.14, Autumn, 1988.
'Introduction' to Forty Years On: Memories of Britain's Postwar Caribbean Immigrants, Lambeth Council, 1988.
'Brave New World', the New Times issue of Marxism Today, October, 1988.
'Death of The Welfare State', New Internationalist, no.188, October, 1988.
‘Kultteuntai-stelu Jo, Vastorinta’, in Maailmankulturin Aurella (Culture, Globalization), E.Allaratt, S.Hall and L.Wallerstein, University of Jyväskyla, Finland, p.68–86, 1988.

1989
Ausgewähle Schrigten (Selected Essays on Ideology, Culture, Media, The New Right and Racism). Translated Nora Rathzel, Argument (Berlin), pp.1–239, 1989.
'Cultural Identity and Cinematic Representation', in Framework, 36, pp.68–82, 1989
'Ideology and Communication Theory', in Rethinking Communication, vol.1 Paradigm Issues, B.Dervin, L.Grossberg, B.O'Keefe and E.Wartella (eds.), Sage, pp.40–52, 1989.
'Authoritarian Populism' in Thatcherism, B.Jessop, K.Bonnett, S.Bromley and T.Ling (eds.), Polity Press, pp.99–107, 1989.
'C.L.R. James: The Life of a Carribean Historian', in New Statesman and Society, pp.21–27, 9 June 1989.
‘Rassismus als ideologisher Diskurs’, Das Argumont, No.178. (p.913–922).
‘O postmodern-igmu i arrikulajciji’, Nose Teme, vol. xxxiii, No.9, pp.2301–2316
‘Sons and Daughters of the Diaspora’. Ruler of Armet Francis’ Children of the Black Triangle, Artrage (Spring) p.46–47.

1990
The Voluntary Sector Under Attack, The Voluntary Action Council Pamphlets, London, p.1–22.
'The Whites of Their Eyes' (revised) in The Media Reader, M.Alvarado and J.O.Thompson (eds.), pp.7–23, 1990.
‘Cultural identity and Diaspora’, in Identity, J.Rutherford (ed.), Lawrence and Wishart, pp.222–237, 1990.
New Times, S.Hall and M.Jacques, Lawrence and Wishart, 1990.
'Post-modernism: A Conversation with Frederick Jameson', Marxism Today, August 1990.
‘March Without Vision: The End of Thatcherism’, with Martin Jacques. Marxism Today, December, 1990.
‘The Emergence of Cultural Studies and the Crisis of the Humanities’ in October, No.53. Summer, pp.11–24, 1990.

1991
‘Reading Gramsci’ in Gramsci’s Political Thought, Roger Simon, Lawrence and Wishart, pp.7–10, 1991.
Het Minimale Zelf en Andere Opstallen (The Minimal Self and Other Essays), Selected Essays, leitgeverji Sua, Amsterdam, pp.1–211, 1991.
‘Reconstruction Work: Images of Post-war Black Settlement’ in Family Snaps: The Meaning of Domestic Photography, Jo Spence and Patricia Holland (eds) Virago, pp.152–164, 1991.
‘Brave New World: The Debate About Post-Fordism’, in Socialist Review, Vol. 21 No.1, Jan-March, San Francisco, pp.57–64, 1991.
‘You Can’t Go Home Again’, (Review of Rushdie’s Imaginary Homelands) in Sight and Sound, July, 1991.
‘The Local and the Global: Globalization and Ethinicity’, in Culture Globalization and the World System, Anthony King (ed), Macmillan, pp.19–40, 1991.
‘Old and New Identities, Old and New Ethnicities’, in Culture, Globalization and the World System’ Anthony King (ed) Macmillan, pp.41–68, 1991.
‘Europe’s Other Self’. In Marxism Today, August, 1991.
‘Das Ökologie - Problem ud die Notwendigkeiten linker Politik’, Das Argument, No 189, Sept-Oct 1991, pp.665–674, Berlin.
‘Chopping Logic: Jameson’s Post-modernism or the Cultural Logic of Late Captialism’, in Marxism Today: Review of Books, April, 1991.
‘Ideolgie und Okonomie - Marxismus ohne Gewähr’, European Journal for Semiotic Studies, vol.3, (1–2), pp.229-254
‘Gamsci och ir’, in Semit, No.3-4, University of Fund, Sweden, pp.61-69.

1992
‘Cultural Identity and Cinematic Representation’, in Exiles: Essays on Caribbean Cinema, Mbye Cham (ed), Africa World Press, pp.220–236, 1992.
‘And Not A Shot Fired: The End of Thatcherism?’ Marxism Today, January, 1992.
‘Cultural Studies and Its Theoretical Legacies’ in Cultural Studies (eds) Grossberg, Nelson and Treichler, Routledge, pp.277–294, 1992.
Formations of Modernity, (ed. Hall and Gieben). Polity Press, p.1–335, 1992.
‘The Rest and the West: Discourse and Power’, in Formations of Modernity, (eds) Hall and Gieben, Polity Press, pp.275–332, 1992.
‘New Ethnicities’ in ‘Race’, Culture and Difference (ed) J. Donald and A. Rattansi, Sage, pp.252–260, 1992.
‘Crossing Boundaries: Stitching The Self in Place’ in Nothing Stands Still, The Crossing Boundaries Seminar, European Network for Cultural and Media Studies, Amsterdam, pp.4–13, 1992.
‘The Election: No New Vision, No New Votes’, New Statesman and Society, 17 April 1992.
Kulttuurin Ja Politiikan Murroksia (Selected Essays on Culture and Politics), Vastapainoi, Tampara, Finland, pp.1–380, 1992
The Critical Decade: Black Photography in the 1980’s David Bailey and Stuart Hall (eds), Vol? no.3 of Ten 8 , Birmingham, pp.1–159.
‘The Vertigo of Displacement: Shifs within Bleak Documentary Practices’, in Critical Decade, Bailey and Hall (eds.), pp.14–23.
‘Reconstruction Work’, reprinted with images by Vincent Stokes, in The Critical Decade, op.cit. pp.106–113.
‘Identity and the Black Photographic image’, in Critical Decade op.cit, pp.24–31.
‘Our Mongrel Selves’, The Raymond Williams Memorial Lecture, In the Borderlands Supplement, The New Statesman, 19 June 1992.
‘Race, Culture and Communications’, in Rethinking Marxism, Vol. 5, No. 1, Spring 1992, pp.10-18.

1993
The Williams Interviews’, in The Screen Education Reader (ed.) Alverado, Buscombe and Collins, Macmillan
‘What Is the ‘Black’ in Black Popular Culture?’ Black Popular Culture, (ed.) Gina Deck, Dia Centre for the Arts, NYand The Bay Press, Seattle. (p.21–36).
‘Deviancy, Politics and the Media’, reprinted in The Lesbian and Gay Studies Reader, (eds.) H. Abelove, M. Borale and D. Halperin, Routlege, London and New York.
‘Which Public, Whose Service’? in All Our Futures: The Changing Role And Purpose of the BBC, The BBC Charter Review Series, No.1 (ed.) W. Stevenson. The British Film Institute, London.
‘The Television Discourse: Encoding and Decoding’, Reprinted in Studying Culture, Ann Gray and Jim McGuigan (eds.); Edward Arnold, London. (pp.28–34).
Minimal Selves’, reprinted in Studying Culture, (op.cit.), (pp.134–9).
‘Vanley Burke and ‘The Desire For Blackness’, in Vanley Burke: A Retrospective (ed.) Mark Sealy, Laurence and Wishart (pp.12–15).
‘What is this ‘Black’ in Black Popular Culture’? (reprinted) in the Special Issue on ‘Rethinking Race’, Social Justice vol 20, Nos. 1–2.
‘European Cinema on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown’ in Screening Europe: Image and Identity in European Cinema (ed) Duncan Petrie, BFI Working Papers, British Film Institute. (p.45–53).
‘Culture, Community, Nation’, Cultural Studies, vol.7 no.3 (pp.349–363).
‘Metaphors of Transformation’, in Carnival, Hysteria, Writing, For Allon White, Cambridge University Press.
‘The New Europe’, in Disrupted Borders, (ed) Sumil Gupta.
‘Jamaica in England’ Standpoints (The Jamaican Speech Issue), no.30, Nov–Dec 1993. Centre National de Documentation Pedagogue, Paris (pp.28–35).

1994
‘Cultural Studies: Two Paradigms’, re-printed in Contemporary Literary Criticism: Literary and Cultural Studies, Robert Davis and Ronald Schleafer (eds.). Longman (N. Y and London). pp.609–625
‘Encoding/Decoding’, in reprinted in Media Texts: Authors and Readers, ed D. Graddel and O. Boyd Barrett. the Open University and Multi-Lingual Matters, Ltd. 1994.
‘Cultural Studies: Two Paradigms’, reprinted in Culture, Power, Hegemony: A Reader in Contemporary Social Theory, (eds) N Dirks, E Eley and S. Ortner. Princeton University Press, (pp.520–538).
‘Cultural Identity and Diaspora’, reprinted in Colonial Discourse and Post-Colonial Theory A Reader, (eds) P. Williams and L., Chrisman, Harvester Wheatsheaf, London (P392–401).
‘Reflections on the Encoding/Decoding Model: An Interview’, in Viewing, Reading, Listening: Audiences and Cultural Reception, (eds) J. Cruz and J. Lewis, Westview Press, Boulder, Colarado. (pp.253–274)
‘Whose English’?, in Balancing Literature, Language and Media in the National Curriculum: Report of Commission of Inquiry Into English, (ed) Cary Bazalgette, The British Film Institute.
‘Some Incorrect Paths Through Political Correctness’, in The War of Words, (ed) Sarah Dunant, Virago.
‘Encoding and Decoding’. Reprinted, in The Cultural Studies Reader, (ed) Simon Duning, Routledge.

1995
‘The Whites of Their Eyes: Racist Ideologies and the Media’ in Gender, Race and Class in Media, (eds) G. Dines and J. Humez, Sage, London. (pp. 18–23).
‘Myths of Caribbean Identity’, (The Walter Rodney Memorial Lecture), New Left Review.
‘Fantasy, Identity, Politics’, in Cultural Remix: Theories of Politics and the Popular, (ed.) E. Carter, J. Donald and J. Squires, New Formations and Lawrence and Wishart, London, (pp.63–70).
‘Culture, Community and Nation’, in Identity, Authority and Democracy, Research Papers in Media and Cultural Studies, University of Sussex, (pp.39–56).
Six essays, including ‘What Is this Black in Black Popular Culture’ and ‘Metaphors of Transformation’, in Stuart Hall: Critical Dialogues in Cultural Studies, with essays by Iain Chambers, Angela McRobbie, Isaac Julien, Charlotte Brunsdon, Dick Hebdige . (Ed) Dave Morley and Kwan Hsing Chen. Routledge
‘Black and White in Television’, in Remote Control: Dilemmas of Black Intervention in British Film and TV (ed.) June Givanni, British Film Institute, London. pp.13–28.
‘Not A Postmodern Nomad: A Conversation with Stuart Hall (ed.) Les Terry, Arena New Series, Np.5. pp.51–70. North Carlton, Australia.

1996
‘Cultural Studies: Two paradigms’ reprinted in A Cultural Studies Reader: History, Theory, Practice, (eds) J. Munns, and E. Ragan, Longman, London. pp.194–206.
‘Interview with Roger Bromley’, in a Cultural Studies Reader, (eds) J. Munn and G. Ragan, op cit pp.659–673.
‘Response to Saba Mahmood’ in Cultural Studies, Vol. 10 No.1, January, pp.12–15.
‘Signification, Representation and Ideology’: Althusser and the Post-structural Debates’ in Cultural Studies and Communications, (eds) J. Curran, D. Morley and V. Walkerdine. Edward Arnold, London. pp.11–34.
‘Drifting Into A Law and Order Society’, the 1980 Cobden Society Lecture, reprinted in Criminological Perspectives, (eds) J Muncie, E. McLaughlin and M. Langan, Sage, London. pp.257–270.
Essays reprinted in Stuart Hall: Critical Dialogues in Cultural Studies, (eds.) D. Morley and Kwan-Hsing Chen, Routledge, London and New York.
‘When Was The Post-Colonial’, in The Post Colonial Question (ed) L. Curti and I. Chambers, Routledge, London and New York.

1997
Three Interviews with Martin Jacques, The New Statesman
‘Politics, Continency, Strategy’: Interview with David Scott: Small Acts vol 1.
Representation: Cultural Representations and Signifying Practices, (ed). Sage and the Open University
Doing Cultural Studies: The Sony Walkman Story, with P.DuGay. Sage and The Open University
‘The Work of Representation’, in Representation, op.cit.
‘The Spectacle of ‘the Other’’, in Representation, op.cit.
‘The Centrality Of Culture: Notes On The Cultural Revolution Of Our Times’, in Media and Cultural Regulation (ed) K.Thompson. Sage and The O.U.
‘Cultural Studies och dess teoretiska arv” , in Zenit No135/6 1997, Stockholm
‘Culture and Power’, Interview in Radical Philosophy
Four Interviews, New Statesman, with Martin Jacques

1998
‘Rivers of Racism: Enoch Powell Thirty Years On’. New Statesman,17th April
‘Aspiration and Attitude: Reflections on Black Britain In The Nineties’. New Formations, No 33, Spring.’
‘Culture and Power’, Radical Philosophy
‘Subjects in History: Making Diasporic Identities’, in The House That Race Built, ed Wahneema Lubiana. Vintage, NY.
‘There’s No Place Like Home’, (Windrush review). Financial Times. 13/14 June
‘The Great Moving Nowhere Show’, Marxism Today special issue. Nov/Dec.
‘The Windrush Issue: Postscript’, in Soundings, Issue No 10. Autumn
‘Identitadas Minimas’, in Nuestra America, No 13. Brazil
‘El Problema de la Ideologia: marxismo sin garantias’, Doxa, Ano ix No18, 1998, Verano, Argentina
‘Breaking Bread With History: C.L.R.James and The Black Jacobins’, History Workshop Journal, Autumn, 1998.
Evidence on “Racial Stereotyping In The Police” to The Lawrence Inquiry, with Gail Lewis and Eugene McLaughlin
Selected Essays, translated, in Stuart Hall, issue of Contemporary Thought, vol 26 no.4, devoted to work of S,Hall. Tokyo.

1999
“Cultural Identity and Racism” in Resssismus in der Diskussion. Ed. Christopher Burgmer, Elefanten Press, Berlin
‘Ethnizitat: Identitat und Differenz’, (selected essays) in Die Kleinen Unterschiede, (ed) Jan Engelman, Campus Verlag, Germany
‘Re-inventing Britain’, Opening and Closing Statements, in Wasifiri, No.29, Spring
Visual Culture: The Reader, with Jessica Evans (eds), Sage and The Open University
“Have Cultural Studies, Will Travel: Some Conditions of Existence of Trans-national Dialogue’, in A Dialogue With Cultural Studies, (eds) T.Hanada, S.Yoshimi and C.Sparks. Shin-yo-sha, Tokyo.
‘From Scarman to Stephen Lawrence’, History Workshop Journal, No 48.
‘Whose Heritage?’ The Arts Council of England, London

2000
‘Whose Heritage? Unsettling The Heritage, Re-imagining the Post-Nation”, Third Text, 49, Winter-Spring. Kala Press, London
Identiteeti, ( selected essays). Vastapaino, Tempere, Finland
“The Multi-Cultural Moment” in Un/Settled Multiculturalisms, ed. Barnor Hesse. Zed Books, London
Visual Culture. Jessica Evans and Stuart Hall. Sage and O.U... London
“From Scarman to Stephen Lawrence”, reprinted, in Connections. Commission on Racial Equality.
“Multi-cultural citizens, monocultural citizenship? In Tomorrow’s Citizens. IPPR, London
“Whose Heritage?”, reprinted, Annual Report, 1998-9, Danish Ministry of Cultural Affairs. Nybrogade, Denmark
“A European Perspective on Hybridity”, in Hermes. No 28. Issue on Latin America: Culture and Communication. CHRS. Editions, Paris.
“The Anti-Aparthied Movement and the Race-ing of Britain”. Symposium Report, The AAM: A 40 Year Perspective. Sout Africa House, London
“On The Theoretical Legacy of Cultural Studies” Reprinted in Revista de Communicacao e Linguagens. Lisbon.
“A Identidade Cultural na Post-modernidade”, DP&A Editora, Rio de Janairo, Brazil.
“Frontlines, Backyards: The Terms of Change”, and (reprinted) “The formation of a Diasporic Intellectual’, in Black British Culture and Society: A Reader, ed. Kwesi Owusu. Routledge.

2001
“Constituting An Archive” from ‘The Living Archive Papers’. Third Text, No 54. Spring
“Museums of Modern Art And The End Of History” in Annotations 6: Modernity and Difference. Institute for the International Visual Arts (inIVA), London
“Modernity and Difference” with Sarat Maharaj, in Annotations 6, inIVA, London.
“From Scarman to Stephen :Lawrence”. Reprinted in Arbeithkreis Deutsche England-Forschung, vol.46 (eds) K.Schonwalder and I.Strum-Martin. Philo Press, Jahrundert, Germany
“Foucault: Power, Knowledge and Discourse” repr. in Discourse, Theory and Practice: A Reader, (eds) M.Wetherell, S.Taylor, S.Yates. Sage/OU, London.
“The Spectacle Of The Other”, repr. in Discourse, Theory and Practice: A Reader, ibid.
Difference: Contemporary Photographers and Black Identity, with Mark Sealy. Phaidon Press, London

2002
“Political Belonging in a World of Multiple Identities” in Conceiving Cosmopolitanism, (eds) Steven Vertovec and Robin Cohin. Oxford University Press
“From Scarman to Stephen Lawrence” reprinted in Criminology: A Reader, (eds) Yvonne Jewkes and Gayle Letherby. SAGE Publications, London

2003
“Créolité and the Process of Creolization” in Créolité and Creolization, Documenta 11_Platform 3, (eds) Okwui Enwezor, Carlos Basualdo, Ute Meta Bauer, Susanne Ghez, Sarat Maharaj, Mark Nash, Octavia Zaya. Hatje Cantz Publishers, Germany
‘Creolization, Diaspora and Hybridity’, in Creolite and Creolization, Documenta 11, (eds) Okwui Enwesor, et.aAl.,
“Chris Ofili in Paradise: Dreaming of Afro” in Chris Ofili within reach, Chris Ofili and Thelma Golden. Victoria Miro Gallery, London
“Calypso Kings” in The Auditory Culture Reader, (eds) Michael Bull and Les Back. Berg, Oxford
“Maps of Emergency: Fault Lines and Tectonic Plates” in Fault Lines, Contemporary African Art and Shifting Landscapes, (eds) Gilane Tawadros and Sarah Campbell. Institute of International Visual Arts (inIVA)/ Forum for African Arts/ Prince Klaus Fund, London
“The Vertigo of Displacement” with David A. Bailey, reprinted in The Photography Reader, (ed) Liz Wells, Routledge, London
Da Diáspora: Identidades e Mediações Culturais, Editora UFMG, UNESCO, Brasil
“Labour’s Double-Shuffle”, Soundings, Issue 24, Autumn, 2003

2004
“The Way We Live Now” in Mitra Tabrizian, Beyond the Limits, Steidl/bbk=/Museum Folkwang, Essen, Germany

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8 juillet 2009 3 08 /07 /juillet /2009 05:14

Country man et Neg marron

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8 juillet 2009 3 08 /07 /juillet /2009 04:31




In fact, Americans of African descent might be the alienated people in this century. For if America represents for others an emancipation from the past, it means for black Americans an abduction from the past, into first the apocalypse of chattel slavery and then the more subtle horrors of racism, segregation, and “invisibility,” creating the especially acute psychic tensions that we see in Ellison’s novel.

—Robert W. Rudnicki, Percyscapes


idem décalage qui existe entre les grandes épopées et les persos politiques qui en étaient les commanditaires.

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8 juillet 2009 3 08 /07 /juillet /2009 04:12

critères de sélection
réalisateur dont l'oeuvre est principalement fictionnelle, récompensé dans des festivals internationaux, choix des sujets caribéens et internationaux
tenant un discours théorique sur le cinéma

Corpus élémentaire
Martinique, Euzhan Palcy, [Rue Case Nègre]
Haïti, Raoul Peck, [L'Homme sur les quais]
Cuba, Tomas Gutierez Alea, [La Ultima Cena]

Corpus secondaire
Haïti, Jonathan Demme, The Agronomist
Martinique, Camille Mauduech, Les 16 de Basse Pointe
Cuba, Rigoberto Lopez, Roble de Olor
Jamaïque, Life and Debt / Country man
Jamaïque, The Harder they come
Guadeloupe, Christian Lara, 18...

Corpus ter
les films des frères Lumière

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8 juillet 2009 3 08 /07 /juillet /2009 03:50

La pensée post-coloniale pose le refus de l'universalité au titre que ce concept collabore à proptéger les déséquilibres coloniaux, inégalités entre les Européens et les peuples colonisés,  en termes de  : centre et la périphérie, le soi et l'autre, la civilisation et la barbarie, le même et le divers, le civilisé et le primitif.
"The end of European imperialism did not signal the death of its project of universalism. Nor did entry into the period of the so-called liberating “posts” neutralize the Manichean epistemologies of race, ethnic and geo-cultural difference on which colonialism operated and flourished. Edward Said reminds us in Culture and Imperialism that “the imperial past lives on” (20) in today’s global setting even as its liberties, flows, and multiplicities  are celebrated. " (Jenifer Rahim, Anthurium 2004, vol 2) [ link ]

Or, la question de l'Art, du Beau est une question qui relève de l'universalité. Cela empêche-t-il une réflexion d'ordre esthétique ?
Qu'est-ce que l'art, à l'heure du post-colonial ?
Et après le post-colonial ?


Quel rapport a-t-on à l'oeuvre d'art ?
http://www.fabula.org/actualites/article32030.php

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24 mai 2009 7 24 /05 /mai /2009 19:20

recherche à faire à partir du fonds de la Bifi

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24 mai 2009 7 24 /05 /mai /2009 18:59

Pour
cf entretien informel avec Rigoberto Lopez ( FDF, mai 2008) : l'existence d'un "ser caribeño", fondé sur une expérience historique commune, celle de l'espace plantationnaire et qui implique des problématiques communes;

Contre
1)absence d'une industrie/économie propre et conséquemment dépendance vis-à-vis des fonds des anciennes métropoles
2)lien entre émergence/reconnaissannce d'un cinéma national en relation avec un événement historique en relation avec le supranational et la détermination (ou l'implication) du cinéma comme important cf.création de l'Instituto Cubano de Arte y Industria Cinematografico en 59. 1er article de sa constitution : "le cinéma est un art".
3)place prépondérante du long métrage (film) de fiction sur le film documentaire dans une production pour qu'il y ait l'établissement académique. [Pourquoi cela ?]
Or la production caribéenne dominée par le film documentaire et le court métrage

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