The beginnings of Caribbean literature lie hidden In the folklore of the plantation era and in the prim, condescending travelogues, the exotic novels, and the apparently naive slave narratives - often authored by Whites - that began to appear as early as the eighteenth century. Francis Williams, the classically educated Black poet of 18th century Jamaica, used conventional Augustan poetics to protest racism and assert the common humanity of mankind. The vision draws from Caribbean life. By the 19th century some black poets began to write of their own concerns and experiences, some writing in the local vernacular. The essays in this book are intended to introduce the reader to the wide range of important Caribbean writers, from the pioneers ...
For those interested in reading or studying post-colonial and African American women's writing, this...
This thesis examines the position of V.S. Naipaul within the intellectual history of the postcolonia...
For different reasons, both \u27New Literatures\u27 and \u27The Caribbean\u27 are not self-evident t...
The Caribbean has traditionally been understood as a region that did not develop a significant ‘nati...
This volume examines what Caribbean literature looked like before 1920 by surveying the print cultur...
The Purloined Islands offers the first book-length exploration of literary and cultural exchanges be...
Caribbean Literature (Francophone), or Antillean literature, is the literature in French from Guadel...
During Fall Semester 2016, the IDEA LAB in GWB Building will be showing This Ground Beneath My Fee...
The concept of Caribbean literature is relatively recent, validated by the growing awareness in the ...
Map showing islands in the Caribbean. Commentary talks about the results of colonisation on the ind...
Using Caribbean Literature, the author paints a picture of the cultural conditions in Contemporary C...
―Occasions for Reading ‖ argues for a new methodology of postcolonial reading that traces the origin...
Map showing islands in the Caribbean. Commentary talks about the results of colonisation on the ind...
This study is centrally concerned with the practice of reading Caribbean writing, and the representa...
The years between the 1920s and 1970s are key for the development of Caribbean literature, producing...
For those interested in reading or studying post-colonial and African American women's writing, this...
This thesis examines the position of V.S. Naipaul within the intellectual history of the postcolonia...
For different reasons, both \u27New Literatures\u27 and \u27The Caribbean\u27 are not self-evident t...
The Caribbean has traditionally been understood as a region that did not develop a significant ‘nati...
This volume examines what Caribbean literature looked like before 1920 by surveying the print cultur...
The Purloined Islands offers the first book-length exploration of literary and cultural exchanges be...
Caribbean Literature (Francophone), or Antillean literature, is the literature in French from Guadel...
During Fall Semester 2016, the IDEA LAB in GWB Building will be showing This Ground Beneath My Fee...
The concept of Caribbean literature is relatively recent, validated by the growing awareness in the ...
Map showing islands in the Caribbean. Commentary talks about the results of colonisation on the ind...
Using Caribbean Literature, the author paints a picture of the cultural conditions in Contemporary C...
―Occasions for Reading ‖ argues for a new methodology of postcolonial reading that traces the origin...
Map showing islands in the Caribbean. Commentary talks about the results of colonisation on the ind...
This study is centrally concerned with the practice of reading Caribbean writing, and the representa...
The years between the 1920s and 1970s are key for the development of Caribbean literature, producing...
For those interested in reading or studying post-colonial and African American women's writing, this...
This thesis examines the position of V.S. Naipaul within the intellectual history of the postcolonia...
For different reasons, both \u27New Literatures\u27 and \u27The Caribbean\u27 are not self-evident t...