Abstracts
Abstract
This article analyzes how a body of twenty-first-century Québécois films featuring Lebanese (or Syrian) protagonists construct the migrant subject in relation to place and gender. It examines how its corpus—Wajdi Mouawad’s Littoral (2004), Ivan Grbovic’s Romeo Onze (2011), Samer Najari’s Arwad (2013) and three films by Maryanne Zéhil, De ma fenêtre sans maison (2006), La vallée des larmes (2012), and L’autre côté de novembre (2016)—portrays male or female protagonists experiencing identity crises as they negotiate the entre-deux, the in between, of migrant identities. These films represent what Homi K. Bhabha has called “third space interventions” by (mostly) migrant filmmakers and they seek to combat what has been identified as a “state-sponsored amnesia” about the Lebanese Civil.
Keywords:
- Quebec cinema,
- migrant cinema,
- Lebanese migrants,
- Marianne Zéhil,
- Wajdi Mouawad,
- Ivan Grbovic,
- Dominique Chila,
- Samer Najari
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Appendices
Biographical note
Amy J. Ransom is professor of French at Central Michigan University and editor of the scholarly journal Québec Studies. She has published widely on Québec’s popular culture, including the books Science Fiction from Québec: A Postcolonial Study (McFarland, 2009) and Hockey PQ: Canada’s Game in Quebec’s Popular Culture (University of Toronto Press, 2014). In addition, her articles on Haitian-Canadian writers Gérard Étienne, Dany Laferrière, and Stanley Péan have appeared in journals and edited volumes. She is currently working on a book-length project on the historical imagination in twenty-first century Québécois film.