5 resultados para French contemporary novel

em WestminsterResearch - UK


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Special dossier on â˜La fiction politiqueâ, eds. Emily Apter and Emmanuel Bouju.

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This chapter looks at the assumptions made about the 'fictionality' of prose fiction implicit in the contemporary historical novel. In particular it argues that the recent historical novel has developed a set of 'reality effects' which appear to look back to modernist writing, but in fact work to secure a disguised referentiality in the face of a loss of faith in the fictional.

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The large contemporary French migrant population â estimated by the French Consulate at around 300,000â400,000 in the UK, the majority living in London and the South-East â remains â˜absentâ from studies on migration, and, in a study of migrant food history in Britain, is considered not to have left traces as a migrant community. Over the centuries, the presence of various French communities in London has varied significantly as far as numbers are concerned, but what does not change is their simultaneous â˜visibilityâ and â˜invisibilityâ in accounts of the history of the capital: even when relatively â˜visibleâ at certain historical moments, they still often remain hidden in its histories. At times the French in London are described as a â˜sober, well-behaved [â¦] and law-abiding communityâ; at other times they â˜appeared as a foreign body in the cityâ. This article reflects on the dynamics at play between a migrant culture associated with high cultural capital (so much so that is often emulated by those who are not French) and the host culture perception of and relationship to it, in order to consider what this may â˜meanâ for the French (and Francophone) migrant experience. French gastronomy and culinary knowledge is taken as an example of material culture and of cultural capital â˜on displayâ specifically in the activity of dining out, especially in French restaurants, or in those influenced by French gastronomy. The social activity of dining out is replete with displays of knowledge (linguistic, culinary), of cultural literacy, of modes of behaviour, of public identity, and of rituals strictly codified in both migrant and host cultures. Dining out is also an emotional and politically-charged activity, fraught with feelings of suspicion (what is in the food? what does the chef get up to in the kitchen?) and of anxieties and tensions concerning status, class and gender distinctions. This article considers the ways in which the migrant French citizen of London may be considered as occupying an ambiguous position at different times in history, simultaneously possessing cultural capital and needing to negotiate complex cultural encounters in the connections between identity and the symbolic status of food in food production, food purveying and food consumption.