This thesis sets out to investigate the ways in which Caribbean authors have responded to the canonical texts of the coloniser, and how they have rewritten certain genres, modes and the ideological biases that inform them. In Chapter One, the continuing presence of representations of the Caribbean as paradise or Eden – evident, I suggest in my Introduction, in the first works of Caribbean literature, such as James Grainger’s The Sugar-Cane (1764), and later in J. E. C. McFarlane’s ‘My Country’ (1929), Tom Redcam’s ‘My Beautiful Home’ (1929), H. S. Bunbury’s ‘The Spell of the Tropics’ (1929) – is revised in the works of Una Marson, Alejo Carpentier, Aimé Césaire, Édouard Glissant, Gisèle Pineau, and Shani Mootoo; while the more direct canoni...
In my own research and teaching of Commonwealth hterature, I am ever more conscious of a dilenmia co...
This thesis approaches the issue of form in the Caribbean novel from the perspective of the key role...
This paper discloses the features of the twentieth century Anglophone Caribbean cultural transformat...
This thesis sets out to investigate the ways in which Caribbean authors have responded to the canoni...
Critical responses to ‘creolization’ have tended to characterise it as a process of synthesis and ad...
My article will provide a brief overview of a plethora of terms used in the postcolonial studies t...
AbstractThis paper tackles the concept of creolization that lies at the very center of discussions o...
97 pagesThroughout the 20th century, many of the territories colonized by once expansive European em...
In this essay Kevin Frank goes against the current in questioning the social and intellectual embrac...
If creolization was represented as the property of the postcolonial world, the sign of hyphenated cu...
An examination of postcolonial writings from the Caribbean disrupts the notion that postcolonial dis...
My thesis examines how the form of the novel is transformed in the postcolonial/neo-imperial contex...
<p>The Caribbean, as it is known today, is arguably the very last world born in the history of human...
That the history of modernity is characterised by a narrative blindness, wherein the historical and ...
Alongside the essays and fiction of Edouard Glissant, Wilson Harris's writings stand as one of the m...
In my own research and teaching of Commonwealth hterature, I am ever more conscious of a dilenmia co...
This thesis approaches the issue of form in the Caribbean novel from the perspective of the key role...
This paper discloses the features of the twentieth century Anglophone Caribbean cultural transformat...
This thesis sets out to investigate the ways in which Caribbean authors have responded to the canoni...
Critical responses to ‘creolization’ have tended to characterise it as a process of synthesis and ad...
My article will provide a brief overview of a plethora of terms used in the postcolonial studies t...
AbstractThis paper tackles the concept of creolization that lies at the very center of discussions o...
97 pagesThroughout the 20th century, many of the territories colonized by once expansive European em...
In this essay Kevin Frank goes against the current in questioning the social and intellectual embrac...
If creolization was represented as the property of the postcolonial world, the sign of hyphenated cu...
An examination of postcolonial writings from the Caribbean disrupts the notion that postcolonial dis...
My thesis examines how the form of the novel is transformed in the postcolonial/neo-imperial contex...
<p>The Caribbean, as it is known today, is arguably the very last world born in the history of human...
That the history of modernity is characterised by a narrative blindness, wherein the historical and ...
Alongside the essays and fiction of Edouard Glissant, Wilson Harris's writings stand as one of the m...
In my own research and teaching of Commonwealth hterature, I am ever more conscious of a dilenmia co...
This thesis approaches the issue of form in the Caribbean novel from the perspective of the key role...
This paper discloses the features of the twentieth century Anglophone Caribbean cultural transformat...