Creolization on Screen: Guy Deslauriers's The Middle Passage as Afro-Diasporic Discourse [Le passage du milieu]

Creolization on Screen: Guy Deslauriers's The Middle Passage as Afro-Diasporic Discourse [Le passage du milieu]

Author: 
Saint-Just, Sophie
Place: 
Oxon
Publisher: 
Taylor & Francis Group
Date published: 
2019
Record type: 
Region: 
Journal Title: 
African and Black Diaspora: an international journal
Source: 
African and Black Diaspora: An International Journal, Volume 12, Number 3, 2019, PP. 287-303
Abstract: 

Le passage du milieu (France, 1999) or The Middle-Passage (US version, 2001) proposes in theoretical and conceptual cinematic language a visual and aural translation of the Creolization process on screen. Drawing on literary and theoretical imageries of the middle passage, Filmmaker Guy Deslauriers and his screenwriters replace plot-driven Western literary and visual constructions of la traite with an abstract and disorienting rumination on the slave trade to situate the film in a tradition of African diasporic discourses and to posit the ship as the first island and the original site of proto-creolization.

Language: 
Subject profile : 

CITATION: Saint-Just, Sophie. Creolization on Screen: Guy Deslauriers's The Middle Passage as Afro-Diasporic Discourse [Le passage du milieu] . Oxon : Taylor & Francis Group , 2019. African and Black Diaspora: An International Journal, Volume 12, Number 3, 2019, PP. 287-303 - Available at: https://library.au.int/creolization-screen-guy-deslaurierss-middle-passage-afro-diasporic-discourse-le-passage-du-milieu-0