Jacques Roumain and Gouverneurs de la rosée

The year 2007 was the centennial of the birth of Jacques Roumain, the greatest Haitian author of all times. During his short life (he died in 1944) he cultivated a number of literary genres, publishing poems, novels and essays. All these have been collected for the first time in an impressive volume...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mats Lundahl
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Stockholm University Press 2010-11-01
Series:Iberoamericana: Nordic Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies
Online Access:http://www.iberoamericana.se/articles/76
Description
Summary:The year 2007 was the centennial of the birth of Jacques Roumain, the greatest Haitian author of all times. During his short life (he died in 1944) he cultivated a number of literary genres, publishing poems, novels and essays. All these have been collected for the first time in an impressive volume edited by Léon-François Hoffman: Jacques Roumain, 'OEuvres completes', (Roumain, 2003). Here we find 'Bois-d’ébène' (1945), as well as other poetry, the two volumes of short stories, 'La proie et l’ombre' (1931) and 'Les fantoches' (1931), both dealing with the Haitian upper class, and his two great peasant novels, 'La montagne ensorcelée' (1931) and 'Gouverneurs de la rosée' (1944), his absolute masterpiece, published only after his untimely death at the age of 37, as well as his essay on the sacrifice of a voodoo drum, 'Le sacrifice du tambour-assôtô(r)' (1943).
ISSN:0046-8444
2002-4509