
Yellow Negroes and Other Imaginary Creatures
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- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی

January 22, 2018
France’s colonial history and current racial tensions underpin this dynamically drawn collection. Expanding on the characters in The School of Misery (2013), Alagbé explores themes of disconnection among Africans living in France and the uneasiness the native French feel in their presence. Some pieces provide sharp commentary on the enduring existence of colonial attitudes. “Postcard from Montreuil” is a straightforward depiction of the occupation of an employment agency by Malian laborers. “Sand Niggers” ties the 1961 Paris massacre of Algerians to the current migrant crisis, then ties it off with a mystical flourish. The more sprawling, Flaubert-inspired title story weaves together the experiences of a white French woman whose father hates her seeing “a black” with her boyfriend’s trouble finding work and security (“pain and pride are two needles under his skin”) and his family’s harassment by a lonely old white man who fought in the African colonial wars. Alagbé’s unstructured storytelling makes as strong an impression as his artwork’s contrast between dramatic black slashes and negative space. His imagery and text together create haunting narratives in which a past of racism and guilt keeps overwhelming the present, and also the reader.

November 1, 2018
With poetic, elliptical text and stark, impressionistic black-and-white art, French cartoonist Alagb{amp}eacute; reveals the toxic legacy of European colonialism upon individuals and families. Siblings Martine and Alain, undocumented Beninese immigrants in Paris, first exploit then reject the fawning attentions of a former military man now ostracized for killing protestors. A concluding piece comments on recent migrants and their unwelcome reception, including those in the United States impacted by President Trump's recent policies. (Xpress Reviews 2/9/18)
Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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