In my dissertation I examine the fictional work of contemporary Caribbean women writers who revise conventional patriarchal paradigms in order to subvert them. I analyze how these writers undermine the foundations of monolithic notions of history and, at the same time, legitimize the representation of the past as a “decentralized” place, where diverse, non-mainstream, silenced collectivities can be assimilated. This marginal or minority vision also implies a questioning, in historical and cultural terms, about the way in which traditional phallocentric logic builds and imposes identities. Because traditionally history has dealt with heroic figures, these works return to the past to offer a vision of common, simple people in order to rescue ...
Like African American women, African Caribbean women have been influenced by their migratory experie...
In Puerto Rico, the issue of gendered violence has been bubbling under the surface for decades from ...
This dissertation, “Indebted Pasts, Alternative Futures: Caribbean Digital Imaginations in Twenty-Fi...
In my dissertation I examine the fictional work of contemporary Caribbean women writers who revise c...
In my dissertation I examine the fictional work of contemporary Caribbean women writers who revise c...
This dissertation explores how the historical novel has been adapted by Caribbean women writers to r...
This dissertation explores how the historical novel has been adapted by Caribbean women writers to r...
This dissertation explores the discursive transformations in five novels written after 1969 by Hispa...
The idea of history remains a central concern in Caribbean Literature and is often linked to the pro...
The slave trade and colonial regimes disrupted the collectivity and history of the Caribbean populat...
This dissertation analyzes how Caribbean-American writers living elsewhere challenge common ideas ab...
This study examines Caribbean women\u27s fiction and memoir that creatively interferes with colonial...
This dissertation analyzes how Caribbean-American writers living elsewhere challenge common ideas ab...
French Caribbean along with other Third World intellectuals have examined from different perspective...
Like African American women, African Caribbean women have been influenced by their migratory experie...
Like African American women, African Caribbean women have been influenced by their migratory experie...
In Puerto Rico, the issue of gendered violence has been bubbling under the surface for decades from ...
This dissertation, “Indebted Pasts, Alternative Futures: Caribbean Digital Imaginations in Twenty-Fi...
In my dissertation I examine the fictional work of contemporary Caribbean women writers who revise c...
In my dissertation I examine the fictional work of contemporary Caribbean women writers who revise c...
This dissertation explores how the historical novel has been adapted by Caribbean women writers to r...
This dissertation explores how the historical novel has been adapted by Caribbean women writers to r...
This dissertation explores the discursive transformations in five novels written after 1969 by Hispa...
The idea of history remains a central concern in Caribbean Literature and is often linked to the pro...
The slave trade and colonial regimes disrupted the collectivity and history of the Caribbean populat...
This dissertation analyzes how Caribbean-American writers living elsewhere challenge common ideas ab...
This study examines Caribbean women\u27s fiction and memoir that creatively interferes with colonial...
This dissertation analyzes how Caribbean-American writers living elsewhere challenge common ideas ab...
French Caribbean along with other Third World intellectuals have examined from different perspective...
Like African American women, African Caribbean women have been influenced by their migratory experie...
Like African American women, African Caribbean women have been influenced by their migratory experie...
In Puerto Rico, the issue of gendered violence has been bubbling under the surface for decades from ...
This dissertation, “Indebted Pasts, Alternative Futures: Caribbean Digital Imaginations in Twenty-Fi...