Home Caribbean News New Book— “Transoceanic Entanglements in Francophone Settings”

New Book— “Transoceanic Entanglements in Francophone Settings”

37

Women, Theory, Praxis, and Performativities: Transoceanic Entanglements in Francophone Settings, edited by Jacqueline Couti and Anny-Dominique Curtius, was published earlier this month (7 November 2025, Liverpool University Press). This collection of essays aims to “reframe postcolonial debates and reveal the interconnected dialogues led by women from former French colonies and post-contact island territories.”

Description: Women, Theory, Praxis, and Performativities: Transoceanic Entanglements in Francophone Settings bridges the gap between the Caribbean, the Indian Ocean and the Pacific. It collectively fosters new transoceanic modes of thinking to reframe postcolonial debates and reveal the interconnected dialogues led by women from former French colonies and post-contact island territories. Thus, the volume unsettles the male agenda (captains, missionaries, mariners, ethnographers), and pays attention to the ways in which artists, writers, and activists have theorized or poetized women and the seas, reclaimed agency and created transformative possibilities. To critically map out a gendered conversation with the ocean, the contributors explore activisms and feminisms, intersectional praxes of care, ecological and health impacts of nuclear radiation and chlordecone contamination, queerness, decolonizing dance, the unsettling of official archives and female tidalectical corporeality and embodiments, Mā’ohi epistemologies and ontologies, silence as empowerment against colonial violence, forced migration and vulnerability.

The volume’s overarching approach belongs to a “politics of refusal” which brings forth formerly discarded archives and discredited sites of knowledge to counter ideologies and doctrinal apparatus that promote forgetting or erasure among non-sovereign populations.

In exploring transoceanic feminine spaces as vital sites of knowledge production, this interdisciplinary collaboration aims to ensure that readers actively engage with feminine praxes, understanding their significance not only as theoretical constructs but as lived experiences (re)occupying, (re)appropriating and transcending patriarchal and postcolonial spaces.

Jacqueline Couti is the Laurence H. Favrot Professor of French Studies at Rice University. Her research and teaching interests delve into the transatlantic and transnational interconnections between cultural productions from continental France and its now former colonies.

Anny-Dominique Curtius is Professor of Francophone Studies at the University of Iowa, and her latest book is Suzanne Césaire: Archéologie littéraire et artistique d’une mémoire empêchée. Her interdisciplinary research addresses the re-memory of slavery and racial ecologies.

[An Open Access edition of this book is available on the Liverpool University Press website and the OAPEN library.]

ISBN: 9781836245377 (Paperback) |eISBN:9781836249276 (PDF) |eISBN:9781836249382 (ePub)

For more information, see Women, Theory, Praxis, and Performativities | Home

Women, Theory, Praxis, and Performativities: Transoceanic Entanglements in Francophone Settings, edited by Jacqueline Couti and Anny-Dominique Curtius, was published earlier this month (7 November 2025, Liverpool University Press). This collection of essays aims to “reframe postcolonial debates and reveal the interconnected dialogues led by women from former French colonies and post-contact island territories.” Description: Women, Theory,