samedi, 02 mars 2013
En mission à Pietermaritzburg (11-16 février 2013)
Voici un copié-collé (pour raison de sauvegarde - je doute que cette page Web soit éternelle sur le site d'UKZN) de l'article paru le 1er mars à propos de notre mission de cinq jours en Afrique du Sud. Je corrige juste deux ou trois inexactitudes, par rapport à l'original. [Oui, j'utilise ce blog aussi comme archivage professionnel et autobiographique. Touraine sereine et moi sommes de vieux amis, on se passe toutes nos fantaisies.]
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Two visiting French academics, Professor Philip Whyte and Dr Guillaume Cingal of the University of Tours, addressed staff and students at a UKZN seminar at the Centre for African Literary Studies (CALS) recently. CALS held an informal lunch for the two visitors who were invited by Professor Bernard DeMeyer of French Studies and also a member of CALS Board.
The main purpose of the visit was to discuss the partnership between the two institutions which involves staff and student exchange and joint research among other co-operation and thus the visitors met the French discipline on the Pietermaritzburg campus, the English Discipline, International Relations and the Dean and Head of the School of Arts, Professor N Zulu.
They also held a meeting with two University of Tours exchange students who are at UKZN this semester.
Informal discussion at the seminar included ideas on the sort of student, staff and research exchanges that could be arranged in future between UKZN and the University of Tours involving English literary studies.
Whyte formerly co-ordinated the MA programme at the University of Tours and his field of specialisation is postcolonial theory and literature in West Africa. He has published a book on Ayi Kwei Armah and about 20 articles on African writers, Ben Okri of Nigeria, Kojo Laing of Ghana, Syl Cheney Coker of Sierra Leone, Syl Bendele-Thomas of Nigeria, Abdulrazak Gurnah of Zanzibar and Kofi Awoonor of Ghana.
Cingal is the co-ordinator of first-year Applied Languages and is the former Head of the English Department. His fields of specialisation are postcolonial literatures, semiotics and translation studies. He wrote several articles on Nuruddin Farah, Breyten Breytenbach, Arundhati Roy, as well as on Jamal Mahjoub.
In his presentation Whyte gave an overview of the history of West African writing in English while Cingal analysed two South African poems, including Jeremy Cronin’s poem, Who. He emphasised the need to provide the historical and social contexts to poems when teaching them to French students.
The French visitors were very impressed by the collection of books at CALS, especially the Onitsha market literature, and the newly archived unpublished materials. They found several items they had previously been unable to locate. "Each shelf cries out for a conference about its holdings," said Dr Cingal. "Future research exchanges will certainly provide the opportunity to take this challenge further."
/ Source de l'article original : UKZN.
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