Passeurs de mémoire populaire : Kwani Trust et les lieux de l’histoire

This article explores the ways in which the Kwani? journal has opened up new forms and spaces for cultural memory. It argues that the editorial agenda of, as well as the work of some of the most prominent voices associated with Kwani Trust as a literary network (including Andia Kisia, Parselelo Kant...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kate Wallis
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Pléiade (EA 7338) 2019-07-01
Series:Itinéraires
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/itineraires/5947
id doaj-7f514f7f98f34826a872c195ad09144c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7f514f7f98f34826a872c195ad09144c2020-11-25T02:05:33ZfraPléiade (EA 7338)Itinéraires2427-920X2019-07-012019110.4000/itineraires.5947Passeurs de mémoire populaire : Kwani Trust et les lieux de l’histoireKate WallisThis article explores the ways in which the Kwani? journal has opened up new forms and spaces for cultural memory. It argues that the editorial agenda of, as well as the work of some of the most prominent voices associated with Kwani Trust as a literary network (including Andia Kisia, Parselelo Kantai, Billy Kahora and Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor), reflects a particular preoccupation with historiography—or the ways in which memory and history are constructed and take form as texts. Setting this in the context of the wider engagement of donor-funded cultural production in Kenya with questions of history and memory in this period, it examines the different ways that these writers confront and explore questions around where knowledge about Kenya’s past is located, who history is produced by and for, and memory’s relationship to literature and material form. Building on and problematizing Jan Assmann’s framing of collective memory as made up of “cultural memory” and “communicative memory,” and putting this in dialogue with Karin Barber’s definitions of “popular arts” (Barber 1987), it characterizes this group of writers as engaged in the construction of popular memory.http://journals.openedition.org/itineraires/5947Kwani Trustpopular artscultural memoryKenyahistorycontemporary African literature
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kate Wallis
spellingShingle Kate Wallis
Passeurs de mémoire populaire : Kwani Trust et les lieux de l’histoire
Itinéraires
Kwani Trust
popular arts
cultural memory
Kenya
history
contemporary African literature
author_facet Kate Wallis
author_sort Kate Wallis
title Passeurs de mémoire populaire : Kwani Trust et les lieux de l’histoire
title_short Passeurs de mémoire populaire : Kwani Trust et les lieux de l’histoire
title_full Passeurs de mémoire populaire : Kwani Trust et les lieux de l’histoire
title_fullStr Passeurs de mémoire populaire : Kwani Trust et les lieux de l’histoire
title_full_unstemmed Passeurs de mémoire populaire : Kwani Trust et les lieux de l’histoire
title_sort passeurs de mémoire populaire : kwani trust et les lieux de l’histoire
publisher Pléiade (EA 7338)
series Itinéraires
issn 2427-920X
publishDate 2019-07-01
description This article explores the ways in which the Kwani? journal has opened up new forms and spaces for cultural memory. It argues that the editorial agenda of, as well as the work of some of the most prominent voices associated with Kwani Trust as a literary network (including Andia Kisia, Parselelo Kantai, Billy Kahora and Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor), reflects a particular preoccupation with historiography—or the ways in which memory and history are constructed and take form as texts. Setting this in the context of the wider engagement of donor-funded cultural production in Kenya with questions of history and memory in this period, it examines the different ways that these writers confront and explore questions around where knowledge about Kenya’s past is located, who history is produced by and for, and memory’s relationship to literature and material form. Building on and problematizing Jan Assmann’s framing of collective memory as made up of “cultural memory” and “communicative memory,” and putting this in dialogue with Karin Barber’s definitions of “popular arts” (Barber 1987), it characterizes this group of writers as engaged in the construction of popular memory.
topic Kwani Trust
popular arts
cultural memory
Kenya
history
contemporary African literature
url http://journals.openedition.org/itineraires/5947
work_keys_str_mv AT katewallis passeursdememoirepopulairekwanitrustetleslieuxdelhistoire
_version_ 1724937511822688256