Professor Françoise Lionnet
By Rebecca Kendall, Director of Communications
ASC director releases two new books, raises profile of life and literature in Mauritius
With a land mass only about 1.5 times that of Los Angeles, this island nation packs a real punch when it comes to the creation of art, literature, music and culture, says Professor Françoise Lionnet
UCLA Today
Situated in the southwest Indian Ocean, the tiny island nation of Mauritius is the only country in Africa where Hinduism is the most dominant religion. It has also been ranked by the Ibrahim Index of African Governance as the best governed country in Africa five years running, and is home to 1.3 million people, predominantly representing French, African, Creole, Indian and Chinese backgrounds.
Although its land mass is only about 1.5 times that of Los Angeles, it packs a real punch when it comes to the creation of art, literature, music and culture, says Françoise Lionnet, director of UCLA’s African Studies Center, one of close to 30 centers and programs dedicated to world regions and global issues at the UCLA International Institute, and a professor in the Department of Comparative Literature. Sadly, most Americans remain unaware of this jewel in the sea, says Lionnet, who has been working to change this, and who is making her work more accessible to critics and scholars in Mauritius.
Her latest books, “The Known and the Uncertain: Creole Cosmopolitans” and “Writing Women and Critical Dialogues: Subjectivity, Gender and Irony” were released in July. They are also recognized by their French titles, "Le su et l’incertain: Cosmopolitiques créoles de l’océan Indien" and "Ecritures féminines et dialogues critiques," respectively. The official language of Mauritius is English, a remnant of the English colonial era, but everyone speaks French or Kreol in their daily interactions, says Lionnet.
Published in Mauritius, with English and French sections comprising each, they are a labor of love.
“When your work is based in that part of the world, but you work in the U.S., your scholarship is not very visible,” she says, adding that the cost to publish books can be substantial, especially when using university presses, and shipping costs alone can be a major roadblock for local academics and scholars. “Being able to publish in Mauritius was important for me because it was a chance to actually put my work in front of people who known best what I’m talking about. If I’m going to get constructive or useful reactions, I need to get it from there more so than from my colleagues in the U.S.”
Her decision to publish English and French-language sections in each book also made her decision to publish there an easy one. Publishers in Mauritius, which is fundamentally a multi-lingual nation, are quite comfortable with this, whereas American publishers are not, she says.
“In the U.S., it wouldn’t happen. They’re either French language or English language publishers,” she says, adding that there would be concerns that including two languages in a book would limit the market and hamper sales.
So far, response to the two books has been “great.” The launch, which was held at the French Institute of Mauritius, was met with huge fanfare. In addition, Lionnet was featured this month in a 3,200 word article printed in Le Mauricien, a daily French-language newspaper that has been published on the island for more than a century.
Her books, which now total six, with a seventh under contract with Stanford University Press, also serve as a conduit to engage American audiences with life and literature in Mauritius. Lionnet says that the nations in the Indian Ocean still remain largely “invisible” to people in the United States.
“The Indian Ocean seems very far away, and people have very few notions of what the history of that region is about. For me, it is important to continue to remind people that it does exist, that it has a long and interesting history and, nowadays, the Indian Ocean is taking a greater strategic and political importance in the United States with the rise of China and India.”
Published: Friday, August 24, 2012