This dissertation analyzes how Caribbean-American writers living elsewhere challenge common ideas about power, violence and oppression through the reinterpretation of Caribbean dictatorial regimes in their fiction, and how their stories fare in comparison to other narrative traditions such as the Latin American dictator novel genre. The works of Julia Alvarez (The Dominican Republic), Edwidge Danticat (Haiti) and Junot D??az (The Dominican Republic) share thematic and biographical similarities and reveal an emerging aesthetic with definite textual and thematic traits that I identify as Trans-Caribbean, a poetics with four main constitutive aspects. First, it addresses the tensions between individualism and collectivism in Caribbean discour...
2011-07-05My dissertation, “Emperors of Invisible Cities: The Sovereignty of the Imagination in Cari...
This dissertation argues that geographical displacement has partly defined Dominican national identi...
This dissertation challenges conciliatory views of Caribbean identity and epistemology by highlighti...
This dissertation analyzes how Caribbean-American writers living elsewhere challenge common ideas ab...
This dissertation is a project of literary reclamation, canonical revision, cultural analysis, and i...
This dissertation explores the discursive transformations in five novels written after 1969 by Hispa...
In my dissertation I examine the fictional work of contemporary Caribbean women writers who revise c...
textThe assassination of the Dominican dictator Rafael Leonidas Trujillo in 1961 marked the beginnin...
This dissertation challenges conciliatory views of Caribbean identity and epistemology by highlighti...
This dissertation examines how the work of four Puerto Rican poets – Julia de Burgos, Clemente Soto ...
This dissertation proposes a study of female Caribbean subjectivity based on corporeality. By establ...
textMy purpose in writing this dissertation is to re-evaluate the works of three influential Spanish...
In the last two decades scholars across a number of disciplines have demonstrated that the Haitian R...
This dissertation explores the impact of colorism on Spanish Caribbean literature--more specifically...
We can learn and gain a lot by putting Dominican women writers at the center of our attention. Yet t...
2011-07-05My dissertation, “Emperors of Invisible Cities: The Sovereignty of the Imagination in Cari...
This dissertation argues that geographical displacement has partly defined Dominican national identi...
This dissertation challenges conciliatory views of Caribbean identity and epistemology by highlighti...
This dissertation analyzes how Caribbean-American writers living elsewhere challenge common ideas ab...
This dissertation is a project of literary reclamation, canonical revision, cultural analysis, and i...
This dissertation explores the discursive transformations in five novels written after 1969 by Hispa...
In my dissertation I examine the fictional work of contemporary Caribbean women writers who revise c...
textThe assassination of the Dominican dictator Rafael Leonidas Trujillo in 1961 marked the beginnin...
This dissertation challenges conciliatory views of Caribbean identity and epistemology by highlighti...
This dissertation examines how the work of four Puerto Rican poets – Julia de Burgos, Clemente Soto ...
This dissertation proposes a study of female Caribbean subjectivity based on corporeality. By establ...
textMy purpose in writing this dissertation is to re-evaluate the works of three influential Spanish...
In the last two decades scholars across a number of disciplines have demonstrated that the Haitian R...
This dissertation explores the impact of colorism on Spanish Caribbean literature--more specifically...
We can learn and gain a lot by putting Dominican women writers at the center of our attention. Yet t...
2011-07-05My dissertation, “Emperors of Invisible Cities: The Sovereignty of the Imagination in Cari...
This dissertation argues that geographical displacement has partly defined Dominican national identi...
This dissertation challenges conciliatory views of Caribbean identity and epistemology by highlighti...