This is the first collection of essays about French-language road movies, a particularly rich yet critically neglected cinematic category. These films, the contributors argue, offer important perspectives on contemporary French ideas about national identity, France’s former colonies, Europe, and the rest of the world. Taken together, the essays illustrate how travel and road motifs have enabled directors of various national origins and backgrounds to reimagine space and move beyond simple oppositions such as Islam and secularism, local and global, home and away, France and Africa, and East and West.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Introduction – Michael Gott and Thibaut Schilt
Chapter 1: On the Eve of the Journey: Tangier, Tbilisi, Calais – Laura Rascaroli
Chapter 2: The Constant Tourist: Passing Intimacy and Touristic Nomadism in Drôle de Félix – Florian Grandena
Chapter 3: Brittany, No Exit: Travelling in Circles in Manuel Poirier’s Western – Thibaut Schilt
Chapter 4: Troubling Return: Femininity and Algeria in La Fille de Keltoum – Darren Waldron
Chapter 5: Going Nowhere Fast: On the Road in Contemporary Algeria in Tariq Teguia’s Rome plutôt que vous – Joseph Mc Gonagle
Chapter 6: Times on the Road: Identity and Lived Temporality in Benoît Jacquot’s À tout de suite and L’Intouchable – Glen W. Norton
Chapter 7: Tourism and Travelling in Jean-Luc Godard’s Allemagne 90 neuf zéro and Éloge de l’amour – Ewa Mazierska
Chapter 8: Under Eastern Eyes: Displacement, Placelessness and the Exilic Optic in Emmanuel Finkiel’s Nulle part terre promise – Michael Gott
Chapter 9: Nowhere to Run, Somewhere to Hide: Laurent Cantet’s L’Emploi du temps – Martin O’Shaughnessy
Chapter 10: Traffic in Souls: The Perils and Promises of Mobility in La Promesse – David Laderman
Chapter 11: Mobility and Exile in Claire Denis’s 35 rhums – Michelle Royer and Miriam Thompson
Chapter 12: Gatlif’s Manifesto: Cinema is Travel – Sylvie Blum-Reid
Über den Autor
Michael Gott is assistant professor of French at the University of Cincinnati.Thibaut Schilt is assistant professor of French at the College of the Holy Cross.