This study examines Caribbean women\u27s fiction and memoir that creatively interferes with colonial and postcolonial Caribbean historical discourses. I argue that this literature decolonizes historical narratives by redressing aspects of conquest and colonialism, specifically by engaging discourses of race, gender, sexuality and class. These narratives are decolonizing agents because they posit voices of the historically silenced and subjugated as history-tellers, use unofficial sources of knowledge to derive a feminist historical poetics, and propose alternative literary strategies for telling Caribbean history.The first chapter traces writers\u27 uses of the indigenous Caribbean\u27s history of resistance, especially the iconographic Car...