Language in disorder and erased references in The Sailing City of Paul Willems (1966) Cover Image

Langue décalée et effacement référentiel dans La Ville à voile de Paul Willems (1966)
Language in disorder and erased references in The Sailing City of Paul Willems (1966)

Author(s): Sophie Chéron
Subject(s): Studies of Literature
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego
Keywords: Paul Willems; The Sailing City; Belgitude; identity; language

Summary/Abstract: Paul Willems (1912-1997) is a French-speaking writer from Flanders who received the Quinquennial Award of French Literature from Belgium for his oeuvre in 1980. His work is set in the literary current of Belgitude, a discourse involving the ambiguous rapport between a devalued native culture (Belgian culture in French) and an exterior standardized culture (French culture from France). Through an analysis of language and space in The Sailing City, I argue that Willems claims a cultural degeneration (typical for Belgitude) in order to reassert a unique Belgian identity. This identity is not based on a defined language and a space – as Willems thinks it would be for the expression of French identity, shaped by a standardized language and explicit spacial references. In Willems’s play, language standardization and spatial references are erased to define a Belgian identity by what it is not rather than by what it is.

  • Issue Year: 2014
  • Issue No: 9
  • Page Range: 135-144
  • Page Count: 10
  • Language: French
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