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Dangerous Creole Liaisons mainly explores the ways in which 19th-century white Creole writers from the French Caribbean and some European travelers represent sexualized female bodies and sexual, gender and racial difference to advance their political ideologies.Learn more about the book and author at Jacqueline Couti's website.
This book could make a perfect blockbuster with a twist. On the surface, it would seem like the perfect tropical flick with beautiful and flamboyant people, sun, sea and the always possible but elusive sex. I envision a movie that is both a darker and quirkier version of Love Actually as well as a zany adaption of a cheesy remake of A Christmas Carol such as The Ghost of Past Girlfriends. International actors and American big stars will comprise the cast.
The film would start in 2009 with the social unrest and strike that paralyzed Guadeloupe and Martinique for about two months. Eloise, a self absorbed TV reality star watching the news, does not understand the French Caribbean people’s protest. She is annoyed that her holidays to Martinique might be postponed. She is tired of people of African descent who are still complaining about slavery, colonialism, oppression and so on. She believes that racism is dead. She often explains that she had has many boyfriends from Martinique. However, to her surprise, all these relationships ended badly. So she tweets her concerns and frustration. The backlash and fury of hashtags that her tweets generate astound her.
That very night, the ghosts of 3 of her Martinican boyfriends visit her. These men help her confront her prejudices and help her understand the persisting impact of colonial history and slavery. She witnesses the love relationships of 5 different couples in Martinique and Guadeloupe in the 19th century. She then debunks the mythology in the French imaginary constructed around the pure white Creole woman, the sulfurous and seductive mulâtresse (light skinned mixed-race woman usually), the oversexed or evil négresse (dark skinned black woman) and the black man as a stallion. She eventually understands the intricacies of not only love, sexuality, gender, race, but also class and nationalism in the Caribbean. Nothing is simple nor black and white.
Marion Cotillard will play Eloise because...[read on]
The Page 99 Test: Dangerous Creole Liaisons.
My Book, The Movie: Dangerous Creole Liaisons.
--Marshal Zeringue