Skip to content

Transpositions

Alison Rice, Rice

Migration, Translation, Music

Barcode 9781789621129
Paperback

Original price £36.32 - Original price £36.32
Original price
£36.32
£36.32 - £36.32
Current price £36.32

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
in stock
FREE shipping

Release Date: 01/11/2021

Genre: Society & Culture
Sub-Genre: Social & Ethical Issues
Label: Liverpool University Press
Series: Contemporary French and Francophone Cultures
Contributors: Alison Rice (Edited by)
Language: English
Publisher: Liverpool University Press

Migration, Translation, Music
This publication benefited from the support of the Institute for Scholarship in the Liberal Arts at the University of Notre Dame.

This collective volume concentrates on the concept of transposition, exploring its potential as a lens through which to examine recent Francophone literary, cinematic, theatrical, musical, and artistic creations that reveal multilingual and multicultural realities. The chapters are composed by leading scholars in French and Francophone Studies who engage in interdisciplinary reflections on the ways transcontinental movement has influenced diverse genres. It begins with the premise that an attentiveness to migration has inspired writers, artists, filmmakers, playwrights and musicians to engage in new forms of translation in their work. Their own diverse backgrounds combine with their awareness of the itineraries of others to have an impact on the innovative languages that emerge in their creative production. These contemporary figures realize that migratory actualities must be transposed into different linguistic and cultural contexts in order to be legible and audible, in order to be perceptible—either for the reader, the listener, or the viewer. The novels, films, plays, works of art and musical pieces that exemplify such transpositions adopt inventive elements that push the limits of formal composition in French. This work is therefore often inspiring as it points in evocative ways toward fluid influences and a plurality of interactions that render impossible any static conception of being or belonging.