Earl Lovelace’s fiction can be said to, ultimately, work as a force to give validity to the Creole culture created out of the coming together of many worlds in the Caribbean. As in his novel The Dragon Can’t Dance, which celebrated those Creole art forms around Carnival, in his next novel, The Wine of Astonishment (1982), i Lovelace celebrates yet another Creole institution, the Trinidadian African-derived church of the Spiritual Baptists. In the novel the Spiritual Baptist church, made to be seen as the darkness from which natives needed to be weaned by colonial authorities, is celebrated and acknowledged as one of the basis that allowed for the creation of a new society away from the colonial narrowness. In The Wine of Astonishment, the r...
This study revolves around the figure of Caribbean writer Earl Lovelace. The thesis demonstrates tha...
The aim of this thesis is to contribute to the study of African-Caribbean cultural and religious pra...
In his novels and short stories, Earl Lovelace describes the island of Trinidad as caught in the ebb...
Earl Lovelace’s fiction can be said to, ultimately, work as a force to give validity to the Creole c...
Earl Lovelace's fiction can be said to, ultimately, work as a force to give validity to the Creole c...
Colonialism has come to be one of the defining historical features of many countries of the world wh...
Trinidad, historically located at the crossroads of the Americas, has produced an incomparable natio...
This paper is an attempt to conduct a cursory but critical investigation into Earl Lovelace’s oeuvre...
This paper argues that it is important to realise that Trinidadian author Earl Lovelace’s 1979 novel...
This thesis approaches the issue of form in the Caribbean novel from the perspective of the key role...
Exorcising Caribbean Ghosts: the Family, the Hero, and the Plantation searches for common hierarchi...
Chapter One deals with the context in which the Trinidad Baptists, and others in the Caribbean area,...
Caribbean communities in Britain are known for the high religiosity of their people, and yet as ‘pop...
Between the seventeenth and nineteenth century, the transatlantic slave trade brought approximately ...
Caribbean communities in Britain are known for the high religiosity of their people, and yet as ‘pop...
This study revolves around the figure of Caribbean writer Earl Lovelace. The thesis demonstrates tha...
The aim of this thesis is to contribute to the study of African-Caribbean cultural and religious pra...
In his novels and short stories, Earl Lovelace describes the island of Trinidad as caught in the ebb...
Earl Lovelace’s fiction can be said to, ultimately, work as a force to give validity to the Creole c...
Earl Lovelace's fiction can be said to, ultimately, work as a force to give validity to the Creole c...
Colonialism has come to be one of the defining historical features of many countries of the world wh...
Trinidad, historically located at the crossroads of the Americas, has produced an incomparable natio...
This paper is an attempt to conduct a cursory but critical investigation into Earl Lovelace’s oeuvre...
This paper argues that it is important to realise that Trinidadian author Earl Lovelace’s 1979 novel...
This thesis approaches the issue of form in the Caribbean novel from the perspective of the key role...
Exorcising Caribbean Ghosts: the Family, the Hero, and the Plantation searches for common hierarchi...
Chapter One deals with the context in which the Trinidad Baptists, and others in the Caribbean area,...
Caribbean communities in Britain are known for the high religiosity of their people, and yet as ‘pop...
Between the seventeenth and nineteenth century, the transatlantic slave trade brought approximately ...
Caribbean communities in Britain are known for the high religiosity of their people, and yet as ‘pop...
This study revolves around the figure of Caribbean writer Earl Lovelace. The thesis demonstrates tha...
The aim of this thesis is to contribute to the study of African-Caribbean cultural and religious pra...
In his novels and short stories, Earl Lovelace describes the island of Trinidad as caught in the ebb...