French 340 - Colonial Cultures

Fall
2017
01
4.00
Laure Katsaros
MWF 12:00PM-12:50PM
Amherst College
FREN-340-01-1718F
CHAP 101
lakatsaros@amherst.edu

In the early years of the twentieth century, the French Colonial Empire stretched from Algiers to Antananarivo and from Hanoi to Cayenne. The Maghreb, French West Africa, French Equatorial Africa, the Indo-Chinese peninsula, and Madagascar all lived under French rule. This class will analyze the creation and dissemination of “colonial cultures” in the wake of French imperialism. From the early nineteenth century on, military conquest went hand in hand with the production of a diverse and wide-ranging colonial imaginary. Schoolbooks, colonial exhibitions, natural history museums, visual artefacts ranging from paintings to advertisements, literary works, songs, and films inspired by “Greater France” proliferated in French culture. Drawing from selected case studies, we will explore the many forms taken by the French colonial imagination. We will also examine critiques of colonialism, as well as strategies and modalities of resistance to the colonial imaginary.  Conducted in French.


Requisite: One of the following--FREN 207, 208, 311 or equivalent. Fall semester. Professor Katsaros.

Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.