“The smuggling of La Francophonie”: Francophone Africans in Anglophone Cape Town (South Africa)

发布者:系统管理员发布时间:2012-12-11浏览次数:153

CÉCILE B. VIGOUROUX

ABSTRACT

Focusing on Black Francophone migrants in Cape Town, it is argued that a locally based Francophone identity has emerged in South Africa that questions the institutional discourse of La Francophonie as the organization of French-speaking states. The new identity has little to do with the organization's ideology of a transnational community of people united by a common language and culture. This is shown by deconstructing the category of passeurs de Francophonie (literally smugglers of la Francophonie as practice) to which the organization assigns migrants in non-Francophone countries who allegedly spread the French language and Francophone culture. It is argued that the notion of Francophone must be grounded empirically and approached in relation to the social environment of the relevant speakers. The post-apartheid South African setting assigns it a meaning different from what it has in Francophone states.

Key Words: francophonie; identity; migration; South Africa

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