Most, if not all, writings by Jamaican writer Michelle Cliff are connected by a subterranean desire to re-write Afro-Caribbean history from new untold perspectives in reaction to the immense loss and/or distortions that marked the region’s history for entire centuries. In this paper, I meticulously read four of Cliff’s texts--Abeng (1984), its sequel No Telephone to Heaven (1987), Claiming an Identity They Taught Me to Despise (1980) and The Land of Look Behind (1985)--to look at how Cliff retrieves her black ancestors’ submerged history and erased past. I particularly explore the methods Cliff deploys to re-center a history deliberately erased/or distorted by what she ironically calls “the official version” (Free Enterprise, 1994, p. 138) ...
Exorcising Caribbean Ghosts: the Family, the Hero, and the Plantation searches for common hierarchi...
Exorcising Caribbean Ghosts: the Family, the Hero, and the Plantation searches for common hierarchi...
The French Caribbean society is an amalgam and a mosaic of racial groups and peoples that originated...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay\u27s first paragraph. Abeng by Michelle Cliff is a coming...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay\u27s first paragraph. Abeng by Michelle Cliff is a coming...
Michelle Cliff is a contemporary author of poetry, short fiction, non-fiction, and three novels to d...
Michelle Cliff is a contemporary author of poetry, short fiction, non-fiction, and three novels to d...
Michelle Cliff is a contemporary author of poetry, short fiction, non-fiction, and three novels to d...
International audienceThis paper shows that Michelle Cliff's work puts Western trauma theory through...
International audienceThis paper shows that Michelle Cliff's work puts Western trauma theory through...
The article explores the Michell Cliff\u27s complex recuperation of silenced traditions of exploitat...
The 'new' nationalisms that have developed in postcolonial Jamaica and South Africa invite the recla...
This study examines Caribbean women\u27s fiction and memoir that creatively interferes with colonial...
Palimpsest, as a paradigm for stor(y)ing cultural memories, seems to be particularly suitable to exp...
The aim of my essay is to show how the Afro-American writer Michelle Cliff uses the concept of matri...
Exorcising Caribbean Ghosts: the Family, the Hero, and the Plantation searches for common hierarchi...
Exorcising Caribbean Ghosts: the Family, the Hero, and the Plantation searches for common hierarchi...
The French Caribbean society is an amalgam and a mosaic of racial groups and peoples that originated...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay\u27s first paragraph. Abeng by Michelle Cliff is a coming...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay\u27s first paragraph. Abeng by Michelle Cliff is a coming...
Michelle Cliff is a contemporary author of poetry, short fiction, non-fiction, and three novels to d...
Michelle Cliff is a contemporary author of poetry, short fiction, non-fiction, and three novels to d...
Michelle Cliff is a contemporary author of poetry, short fiction, non-fiction, and three novels to d...
International audienceThis paper shows that Michelle Cliff's work puts Western trauma theory through...
International audienceThis paper shows that Michelle Cliff's work puts Western trauma theory through...
The article explores the Michell Cliff\u27s complex recuperation of silenced traditions of exploitat...
The 'new' nationalisms that have developed in postcolonial Jamaica and South Africa invite the recla...
This study examines Caribbean women\u27s fiction and memoir that creatively interferes with colonial...
Palimpsest, as a paradigm for stor(y)ing cultural memories, seems to be particularly suitable to exp...
The aim of my essay is to show how the Afro-American writer Michelle Cliff uses the concept of matri...
Exorcising Caribbean Ghosts: the Family, the Hero, and the Plantation searches for common hierarchi...
Exorcising Caribbean Ghosts: the Family, the Hero, and the Plantation searches for common hierarchi...
The French Caribbean society is an amalgam and a mosaic of racial groups and peoples that originated...