Talk:Zofloya

gender analysis
It'd be great if someone could add a gender analysis.

no more!
I don't think anything should be ADDED to this article at all. It's vastly oversized for a novel that very few people read these days. Most of the article has been contributed anonymously, which raises questions about its reliability. Would the author of it like to register, perhaps? Most of the information given does not apply only to this novel and should be given (if required) in thematic articles instead, to which cross-references could be made from a normal-size article on Zofloya (six lines?) Bmcln1 (talk) 21:56, 17 April 2010 (UTC)

"Very few people read" it compared to what? I suspect far more people watch any given episode of Honey Boo Boo than read *Hamlet* in a year, but no one would suggest that the *Hamlet* entry be kept short because of the relatively few number of people who read the play. How many people read it can't be the criterion for determining article length; this would mean "six lines" on texts of massive historical impact that people don't read as much as they once did Kbrewer36 (talk) 00:40, 19 January 2013 (UTC)KB

Zofloya and Zoflora
I just happened across this while searching for information on another novel (which I also just happened across). The other novel is Zoflora; Or, the Generous Negro Girl: A Colonial Story, translated (anonymously) from the French, by "J.B. Piguenard," who is identified by Google Books as Jean Baptiste Picquenard. (I have not yet discovered anything about JBP, regardless of the spelling of his name.) The novel is set in Haiti during the revolution (the villain of the novel seems to be Boukman himself), and was published in London in 1804. This other novel -- which I have not read, I just happened across it -- seems to be another good candidate for an "influence" on Zofloya, but I will leave that to others to determine! Here is the Google Books link to Vol. 2 of Zoflora (I'll let others find Vol. 1):. --Potosino (talk) 17:01, 20 December 2010 (UTC)