Since the Nobel Prize in Literature was awarded to J. M. G. Le Clézio in 2008, there has been a wave of new interest in his oeuvre . This book traces the evolution of the writer's postcolonial thought from his early works to his groundbreaking autobiographical novel Révolutions , arguably his most subversive text to date. The author shows how Le Clézio's critique of colonialism is rooted in an early denunciation of capitalism and philosophical dualism,...