This article considers the comparative merits of ‘queer’ and ‘creolization’ reading models in relation to representations of desire between women in selected Caribbean texts. It argues for a creolizing hermeneutics as a more enabling interpretive model and offers readings of texts by Allfrey, Kincaid and Kempadoo to demonstrate these possibilities
In this thesis, I explore how narrative can be used creatively to represent same-sex desire. Drawing...
This dissertation examines images of woman as the exotic, erotic other as represented in contemporar...
“Creolization, Possession, and Performances in Caribbean Cultural Discourses” entails an intercultur...
In the Caribbean, same-sex desire is fraught with complexities, often hidden, and treated as a threa...
This dissertation examines texts from selected Dominican and Puerto Rican authors written during the...
La créolisation, définie par Edouard Glissant comme la rencontre d’éléments culturels totalement hét...
The genius of our black foremothers... was to create powerful buffers to ward off the nihilistic thr...
This book is the first to focus exclusively on issues of gender and sexuality in a range of post-war...
Writers in the Caribbean, like writers throughout the postcolonial world, return to colonial texts t...
Contemporary Caribbean fiction serves as an active agent for refining and expanding definitions of C...
Volume 1 of this thesis undertakes a feminist reading of selected novels from the Anglophone Caribbe...
This book is the first to focus exclusively on issues of gender and sexuality in a range of post-war...
Studies of sexuality in Caribbean culture are on the rise, focusing mainly on homosexuality and homo...
Love takes many forms and can serve different functions in a person’s life. Some forms, such as roma...
Caribbean sexuality is both hypervisible and obscured. That is, it is celebrated in popular culture ...
In this thesis, I explore how narrative can be used creatively to represent same-sex desire. Drawing...
This dissertation examines images of woman as the exotic, erotic other as represented in contemporar...
“Creolization, Possession, and Performances in Caribbean Cultural Discourses” entails an intercultur...
In the Caribbean, same-sex desire is fraught with complexities, often hidden, and treated as a threa...
This dissertation examines texts from selected Dominican and Puerto Rican authors written during the...
La créolisation, définie par Edouard Glissant comme la rencontre d’éléments culturels totalement hét...
The genius of our black foremothers... was to create powerful buffers to ward off the nihilistic thr...
This book is the first to focus exclusively on issues of gender and sexuality in a range of post-war...
Writers in the Caribbean, like writers throughout the postcolonial world, return to colonial texts t...
Contemporary Caribbean fiction serves as an active agent for refining and expanding definitions of C...
Volume 1 of this thesis undertakes a feminist reading of selected novels from the Anglophone Caribbe...
This book is the first to focus exclusively on issues of gender and sexuality in a range of post-war...
Studies of sexuality in Caribbean culture are on the rise, focusing mainly on homosexuality and homo...
Love takes many forms and can serve different functions in a person’s life. Some forms, such as roma...
Caribbean sexuality is both hypervisible and obscured. That is, it is celebrated in popular culture ...
In this thesis, I explore how narrative can be used creatively to represent same-sex desire. Drawing...
This dissertation examines images of woman as the exotic, erotic other as represented in contemporar...
“Creolization, Possession, and Performances in Caribbean Cultural Discourses” entails an intercultur...