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The Land Without Shadows
Contributor(s): Waberi, Abdourahman a. (Author), Garane, Jeanne (Translator)
ISBN: 081392507X     ISBN-13: 9780813925073
Publisher: University of Virginia Press
OUR PRICE:   $49.01  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: November 2005
Qty:
Annotation: One of the first literary works to portray Djiboutians from their own point of view,
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Fiction
Dewey: FIC
LCCN: 2005007875
Series: CARAF Books: Caribbean and African Literature Translated from French (Hardcover)
Physical Information: 0.6" H x 6.04" W x 8.78" (0.68 lbs) 128 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

One of the first literary works to portray Djiboutians from their own point of view, The Land without Shadows is a collection of seventeen short stories. The author, Abdourahman A. Waberi, one of a handful of francophone writers of fiction to have emerged in the twentieth century from the "confetti-sized state" of Djibouti, has already won international recognition and prizes in African literature for his stories and novel. Because his writing is linked to immigration and exile, his native Djibouti occupies center stage in his work. Drawing on the Somali/Djiboutian oral tradition to weave pieces of legend, proverbs, music, poetry, and history together with references to writers as diverse as Soyinka, Shakespeare, Djebar, Baudelaire, C saire, Waugh, Senghor, and Beckett, Waberi succeeds in bringing his country into a context that reaches well beyond the Horn of Africa.

Originally published in France in 1994 as Le Pays sans ombre, this newly translated collection presents stories about the precolonial and colonial past of Djibouti alongside those set in the postcolonial era. With irony and humor, these short stories portray madmen, poets, artists, French colonists, pseudointellectuals, young women, aspiring politicians, famished refugees, khat chewers, nomads struggling to survive in Djibouti's ruthless natural environment, or tramps living (and dying) in Balbala, the shantytown that stretches to the south of the capital. Waberi's complex web of allusions locates his tales at an intersection between history and ethnography, politics and literature. While written in a narrative prose, these stories nevertheless call on an indigenous literary tradition that elevates poetry to the highest standing.

By juxtaposing the present with the past, the individual with the collective, the colonized with the colonizer, the local with the global, The Land without Shadows composes an image of Djibouti that is at times both kaleidoscopic and cinematographic. Here the art of the short story offers partial but brilliantly illuminated scenes of the Djiboutian urban and rural landscape, its people, and its history.

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