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Léonora Miano

Autor von Season of the Shadow

26 Werke 264 Mitglieder 8 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 1 Lesern

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Werke von Léonora Miano

Season of the Shadow (2013) 70 Exemplare
Contours du jour qui vient (2006) 31 Exemplare
Twilight of Torment: Melancholy (2016) 22 Exemplare
Rouge impératrice: roman (2019) 19 Exemplare
Tels des astres éteints (2008) 9 Exemplare
Ces âmes chagrines (2011) 8 Exemplare
Blues pour Elise (2010) 7 Exemplare
Les Aubes écarlates (2009) 6 Exemplare
Habiter la frontière (2012) 6 Exemplare
Soulfood équatoriale (2009) 4 Exemplare
Marianne et le garçon noir (2017) 4 Exemplare
Ecrits pour la parole (2012) 4 Exemplare

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A obra A estação das sombras, de Léonora Miano, premiada em 2013 com o Prix Femina na França, chega ao Brasil com tradução de Celina Portocarrero e edição da Pallas editora. O romance conta a história da tribo Mulongo como protagonista do enredo sobre o tráfico negreiro e a dizimação dos povos na costa Africana no século XVI. É um romance forte e emocionante e realista pois se baseia em um relatório da UNESCO intitulado “A lembrança da captura”, de 2010, que procura resgatar uma memória do tráfico Transatlântico. Léonora Miano nasceu em 1973 em Douala, na costa de Camarões. Nesta cidade ela viveu a sua infância e a sua adolescência, antes de partir para a França, em 1991, onde reside desde então. Com mais de uma dezena de obras publicadas, Léonora já ganhou o Prêmio Goncourt com Contornos do dia que vem vindo (2006), publicado pela Pallas em 2009, e agora, A estação das sombras (2013), vencedor dos prêmios Femina e Grand Prix do Roman Métis.… (mehr)
 
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andreluizss | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Jun 27, 2022 |
L'impératif est de tracer soi propager de définir ses propres finalités. Quelle parole souhaitons-nous énoncer ? Quels discours voulons-nous même la propager pour donner du sens à nos expériences ? De quels récits enrichir la bibliothèque mondiale pour replacer nos peuples dans la conscience humaine globale ? Si la parole subsaharienne semble encore étouffée, la raison n'est pas à rechercher dans la langue qui en est le véhicule. Cela a d'abord à voir avec la perception de soi.
 
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biblio-lanterne | Aug 20, 2021 |
* : Pas pu entrer dedans. Style alambiqué. Histoire compliquée
 
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Eliseur | Jan 2, 2021 |
If I get just one person to read this novel who wouldn't otherwise have heard of it, I will feel I've done my job here on Goodreads. I'm still quite overwhelmed by what I just read, but let me try to give you a sense of the novel.

Léonora Miano has written with a singular purpose: to document what it must have been like, at the start of the Atlantic slave trade, to live in a village within easy reach of the coastline. What it must have been like to be living in exactly the way you and your people have always lived, and then to have this terror, this violence, this unthinkable and incomprehensible disruption of your reality, come into your lives.

Miano begins in medias res just after several young men disappear from a village. We readers know they have been kidnapped to be taken to the coast and sold. But to their people, they are just gone. And the people don't know how such a thing could have happened. People can die, or be born, or commit crimes, or marry, and these happenings are part of the rhythms of village life, and are well understood, and everyone knows what is to be done in each case. But when men disappear? In this case no one knows how to react. Are the men dead? Then where are the bodies? If there were bodies then the people would know to mourn. But there are no bodies. No one knows what to do. A hasty plan is made to isolate the men's mothers from the rest of the village--because maybe it has something to do with the mothers. But no one really believes that. And when one woman drifts back to her home, no one is sure what to do next. It takes days for the village leaders to decide to ask a neighboring village if they know anything about the men's disappearance. It takes far longer--not until it is too late--for anyone in the village to suspect the truth.

I can't capture for you the perfection of how Miano paints this village and its inhabitants; its rituals and its hierarchies. The way she reaches through history to recreate a pre-literate, pre-colonial culture that is on the brink of losing everything that they trust is true about the world. We know it happened. We know this history in a theoretical way. But we don't have access to the voices of the people that faced this terror. Miano gives them voices. I'm in awe of how deeply she imagines these people, even to the point of making their utter lack of guile, in the beginning of their story, completely believable and heart-rending.
… (mehr)
 
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poingu | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Feb 22, 2020 |

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