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  • 1
    UID:
    gbv_1678861006
    Format: xiii, 247 pages , illustrations , 24 cm
    ISBN: 9782814305243 , 2814305247
    Series Statement: Collection Regards croisés sur le monde anglophone
    Content: General introduction to the ReportAGES series --Introduction /Andrew Griffiths --Henry Morton Stanley, Excerpts --An Anglo-American encounter in Africa : Henry M. Stanley in Abyssinia, 1868 /Andrew Griffiths --La Unión Ilustrada excerpts --The Moroccan war in the Spanish illustrated magazine La Unión Ilustrada : between photojournalism and literary journalism, 1909-1927 /Juan Antonio García Galindo, Antonio Cuartero Naranjo --Ramón J. Sender, excerpt --Mensonge journalistique et vérité romanesque : trois regards espagnols sur la guerre du Maroc /José María Lozano Maneiro --Martinho Simões, excerpt --Outsiders looking in : early days of the Angolan wars in Diário de Notícias /Alice Trindade --Frederick Forsyth, excerpt --A people betrayed," Forsyth, Vonnegut and literary journalism as criticism of British and American policy in Biafra /Christopher Griffin --Ryszard Kapuściński, integrating reporter : towards his Africa and his particular way of writing /Aleksandra Wiktorowska --Philip Gourevitch, excerpt --O jornalismo literário e a dor na terra esquecida /Juan Domingues --Patrick Deville and Jean Hatzfeld, excerpts --Métaphores guerrières sous pression africaine : à la recherche des métaphores d'exception dans la presse couvrant les grands conflits africains /Ivan Gros.
    Content: "This collection of essays explores ways in which early and late examples of literary journalism from England, France, Spain, Portugal and the United States interpolate the aesthetics of war reporting on various fronts and at divergent times in Africa's history, both reproducing and deconstructing the widespread colonial discourse that lies behind nearly every war, campaign, coup, assassination and pogrom that has scarred the continent over the past century. Although often a product of that colonial discourse, the literary journalism examined in this collection was motivated at least in part by the desire to expose the power imbalances that upheld it. Among the primary sources included in this volume are texts by Henry Morton Stanley, Ramón J. Sender, Martinho Simões, Frederick Forsyth, Kurt Vonnegut, Ryszard Kapuscinski, Philip Gourevitch, Jean Hatzfeld and a host of foreign correspondents from Le Monde. Incorporating a wide range of international critical perspectives, this book assesses the impact literary journalism has had on various nations' literary war reporting emanating from colonialist and postcolonialist conflicts and how those stories might help to reconfigure certain historical legacies, journalistic heuristics and literary representations of Africa in the 21st century. By presenting excerpts from several primary sources alongside a contextual gloss and a scholarly essay, the collection highlights the varied effects produced when literary techniques were fused with factual war reporting."--Page 4 of cover
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index , In English, French, or Spanish; source texts in English, Spanish, Portuguese, or Polish, with English translations
    Language: English
    Keywords: Subsaharisches Afrika ; Journalismus ; Bürgerkrieg
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