Narratives of exile and return: Francophone women’s identities in the aftermath of the 2011 Tunisian revolution

On 14th January 2011, President Ben Ali was forced to flee Tunis after twenty-three years in power. The revolution began in December 2010 with the self-immolation of Mohamed Bouazizi, a young fruit-seller who was acting in protest against the repressive and corrupt regime. The overthrow of the dicta...

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Main Author: Pearson, Nicola
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/38880/
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author Pearson, Nicola
author_facet Pearson, Nicola
author_sort Pearson, Nicola
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description On 14th January 2011, President Ben Ali was forced to flee Tunis after twenty-three years in power. The revolution began in December 2010 with the self-immolation of Mohamed Bouazizi, a young fruit-seller who was acting in protest against the repressive and corrupt regime. The overthrow of the dictatorship went on to influence uprisings across the Arab world, and these became known in the West as the ‘Arab Spring’. Since 2011 Tunisia has witnessed a surge in creative production, and the role of art itself has been an important feature of the country’s political revolution. This thesis seeks to open up a new field by focusing on the literary output of two female travel writers of Tunisian origin, Colette Fellous and Dora Latiri, who both produced works of travel literature based on their journeys back to their homeland in the wake of the revolution. Fellous and Latiri have spent most of their adult lives living in Europe, having been exiled from Tunisia when they were young women. In Latiri’s 'Un amour de tn: Carnet d’un retour au pays natal après la revolution', photographs are woven into a fragmented and very personal narrative which highlights not only visions of contemporary Tunisia, but also the narrator’s difficult memories of her childhood. 'La Préparation de la vie' by Fellous similarly charts the narrator’s journey back to post-revolutionary Tunisia and brings to light the little-known phenomenon of the exile of Jewish communities from the country following the Arab-Israeli Six Day War in 1967. Both writers are haunted by feelings of dislocation from Tunisia yet seem compelled to keep returning to it. The literature of these writers has an intricate relationship to many contemporary debates related to cultural identity. I will draw on postcolonial theory to explore and compare the different ways in which Fellous and Latiri represent their journeys back to Tunisia, analysing how the genre of the travel narrative incorporating photos enables them to articulate their complex relationships to it as their homeland and their identities as Tunisian women. The aim of this dissertation is to illuminate the identity dilemmas that arose out of the specific problems that the writers encountered when they responded to their exile from Tunisia. We need narrative- the very process of putting a story together- to make identity meaningful and comprehensible. By addressing these two recent life-narratives that have come out of the immediate wake of the 2011 revolution, we can begin to map the ways in which Tunisian women, writing from the margins of the Tunisian nation, are contributing to debates about identity at this pivotal moment in the country’s history.
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spelling nottingham-388802025-02-28T13:37:01Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/38880/ Narratives of exile and return: Francophone women’s identities in the aftermath of the 2011 Tunisian revolution Pearson, Nicola On 14th January 2011, President Ben Ali was forced to flee Tunis after twenty-three years in power. The revolution began in December 2010 with the self-immolation of Mohamed Bouazizi, a young fruit-seller who was acting in protest against the repressive and corrupt regime. The overthrow of the dictatorship went on to influence uprisings across the Arab world, and these became known in the West as the ‘Arab Spring’. Since 2011 Tunisia has witnessed a surge in creative production, and the role of art itself has been an important feature of the country’s political revolution. This thesis seeks to open up a new field by focusing on the literary output of two female travel writers of Tunisian origin, Colette Fellous and Dora Latiri, who both produced works of travel literature based on their journeys back to their homeland in the wake of the revolution. Fellous and Latiri have spent most of their adult lives living in Europe, having been exiled from Tunisia when they were young women. In Latiri’s 'Un amour de tn: Carnet d’un retour au pays natal après la revolution', photographs are woven into a fragmented and very personal narrative which highlights not only visions of contemporary Tunisia, but also the narrator’s difficult memories of her childhood. 'La Préparation de la vie' by Fellous similarly charts the narrator’s journey back to post-revolutionary Tunisia and brings to light the little-known phenomenon of the exile of Jewish communities from the country following the Arab-Israeli Six Day War in 1967. Both writers are haunted by feelings of dislocation from Tunisia yet seem compelled to keep returning to it. The literature of these writers has an intricate relationship to many contemporary debates related to cultural identity. I will draw on postcolonial theory to explore and compare the different ways in which Fellous and Latiri represent their journeys back to Tunisia, analysing how the genre of the travel narrative incorporating photos enables them to articulate their complex relationships to it as their homeland and their identities as Tunisian women. The aim of this dissertation is to illuminate the identity dilemmas that arose out of the specific problems that the writers encountered when they responded to their exile from Tunisia. We need narrative- the very process of putting a story together- to make identity meaningful and comprehensible. By addressing these two recent life-narratives that have come out of the immediate wake of the 2011 revolution, we can begin to map the ways in which Tunisian women, writing from the margins of the Tunisian nation, are contributing to debates about identity at this pivotal moment in the country’s history. 2016-12-14 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/38880/1/Narratives%20of%20exile%20and%20return_NP.pdf Pearson, Nicola (2016) Narratives of exile and return: Francophone women’s identities in the aftermath of the 2011 Tunisian revolution. MRes thesis, University of Nottingham. Tunisian revolution women Tunisia exiles Colette Fellous Dora Latiri Arab spring literature
spellingShingle Tunisian revolution
women
Tunisia
exiles
Colette Fellous
Dora Latiri
Arab spring
literature
Pearson, Nicola
Narratives of exile and return: Francophone women’s identities in the aftermath of the 2011 Tunisian revolution
title Narratives of exile and return: Francophone women’s identities in the aftermath of the 2011 Tunisian revolution
title_full Narratives of exile and return: Francophone women’s identities in the aftermath of the 2011 Tunisian revolution
title_fullStr Narratives of exile and return: Francophone women’s identities in the aftermath of the 2011 Tunisian revolution
title_full_unstemmed Narratives of exile and return: Francophone women’s identities in the aftermath of the 2011 Tunisian revolution
title_short Narratives of exile and return: Francophone women’s identities in the aftermath of the 2011 Tunisian revolution
title_sort narratives of exile and return: francophone women’s identities in the aftermath of the 2011 tunisian revolution
topic Tunisian revolution
women
Tunisia
exiles
Colette Fellous
Dora Latiri
Arab spring
literature
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/38880/