Trinidad has a long history of applying the linguistic formulation of 'double entendre' as a mode of misinformation that permeates every aspect of its culture. Double entendre here forms an agent of secrecy and camouflage, reversal and subversion, and ensures that 'nothing is ever as it seems'. It is not just a witty, mischievous past-time, but is endemic to the very workings of that society, a status quo that has been born out of a long history of suppression. Even though my theatrical production Carnival Messiah makes no direct reference to the institution of slavery or the British parliamentary abolition act of 1807, its every step is rooted in the emancipation of slaves in order to comprehensively reflect the entire the cultural history...
International audienceHere we are in a steel band3 associative location that shares the space with a...
The development of indigenous music in the English-speaking Caribbean is a complex subject. In gener...
Two characteristics mark the Caribbean: capitalism and the hegemony of North Atlantic versions of Ch...
Trinidad has a long history of applying the linguistic formulation of 'double entendre' as a mode of...
The carnival of Trinidad and Tobago is a performative ritual of cultural resistance and awakening, c...
The aim of this study was to examine the carnival event in Trinidad and Tobago in its contemporary m...
Carnival in Trinidad is one of the most studied by anthropologists, researchers and scholars of danc...
The thesis attempts to look at the ways in which the various ethnic and cultural groups of Africans ...
This dissertation addresses the problem of identity formation for transnational populations. It is c...
Trinidad is comprised of a unique mix of races including the Amerindians, Africans, East Indians, Eu...
As a huge, Caribbean-led, culturally hybridised, inter-ethnic festival of popular artistic creativit...
Trinidad Carnival is the oldest and greatest of them all, the mother of all carnivals, often imitate...
The chant shakes the crowd, uncorking the energy of the masquerade. This is our stomping ground. Not...
Trinidad and Tobago's popular music has served as a resistance strategy to European colonialism, and...
<p>While great strides have been made in the study of Trinidad Carnival, there has yet to be a robus...
International audienceHere we are in a steel band3 associative location that shares the space with a...
The development of indigenous music in the English-speaking Caribbean is a complex subject. In gener...
Two characteristics mark the Caribbean: capitalism and the hegemony of North Atlantic versions of Ch...
Trinidad has a long history of applying the linguistic formulation of 'double entendre' as a mode of...
The carnival of Trinidad and Tobago is a performative ritual of cultural resistance and awakening, c...
The aim of this study was to examine the carnival event in Trinidad and Tobago in its contemporary m...
Carnival in Trinidad is one of the most studied by anthropologists, researchers and scholars of danc...
The thesis attempts to look at the ways in which the various ethnic and cultural groups of Africans ...
This dissertation addresses the problem of identity formation for transnational populations. It is c...
Trinidad is comprised of a unique mix of races including the Amerindians, Africans, East Indians, Eu...
As a huge, Caribbean-led, culturally hybridised, inter-ethnic festival of popular artistic creativit...
Trinidad Carnival is the oldest and greatest of them all, the mother of all carnivals, often imitate...
The chant shakes the crowd, uncorking the energy of the masquerade. This is our stomping ground. Not...
Trinidad and Tobago's popular music has served as a resistance strategy to European colonialism, and...
<p>While great strides have been made in the study of Trinidad Carnival, there has yet to be a robus...
International audienceHere we are in a steel band3 associative location that shares the space with a...
The development of indigenous music in the English-speaking Caribbean is a complex subject. In gener...
Two characteristics mark the Caribbean: capitalism and the hegemony of North Atlantic versions of Ch...