International audienceIn her description of her native island (Antigua), Jamaica Kincaid invites the reader for a generic crossing in A Small Place—the book is not a novel but an essay—and, more importantly, an ideological crossing: the author brings us to think the colonial and post-colonial wound from the point of view of the colonised. If this work deserves a stylistic treatment, it is for the penetrating force of its rhetoric of anger. In its subtle resort to stylistic devices and linguistic tools, Kincaid’s style is disarming. Not only does it forcibly interpellate the reader with the second person pronoun “you” but it gives pragmatic strength to utterances that seem to be particularly simple on the surface. What will be highlighted in...
This essay argues that Jamaica Kincaid’s The Autobiography of My Mother depicts how the indigenous c...
Abstract: Jamaica Kincaid, arguably the most popular Caribbean woman writer living in the USA, has p...
The narrators of Jamaica Kincaid’s Annie John, Lucy, and A Small Place all struggle to form a cohere...
International audienceIn her description of her native island (Antigua), Jamaica Kincaid invites the...
International audienceExile and colonialism play an essential part in Jamaica Kincaid's novels. This...
Caribbean literature maintains a dual relationship with the culture of the former colonizers, hesita...
Being a contemporary Antiguan-American writer, Jamaica Kincaid in her writings explores the themes o...
This essay uses Sara Ahmed's theory of affect to analyze Jamaica Kincaid´s A Small Place. I argue th...
Jamaica Kincaid, arguably the most popular Caribbean woman writer living in the USA, has produced m...
Jamaica Kincaid\u27s novels Annie John and Lucy demonstrate a marked resistance to Western philosoph...
Caribbean literature exposes a history of dispossession, exploitation and oppression which has been ...
The Caribbean is characterized by a certain divided, or hybrid, identity created by the colonial sit...
The paper intends to reread Jamaica Kincaid’s short story, ‘Girl’ (1978) and provide new insights in...
AbstractThis paper deals with My Garden (Book): by Antiguan writer Jamaica Kincaid. The analysis cen...
Jamaica Kincaid is an American novelist, short-story writer, gardener, essayist, and reviewer. She h...
This essay argues that Jamaica Kincaid’s The Autobiography of My Mother depicts how the indigenous c...
Abstract: Jamaica Kincaid, arguably the most popular Caribbean woman writer living in the USA, has p...
The narrators of Jamaica Kincaid’s Annie John, Lucy, and A Small Place all struggle to form a cohere...
International audienceIn her description of her native island (Antigua), Jamaica Kincaid invites the...
International audienceExile and colonialism play an essential part in Jamaica Kincaid's novels. This...
Caribbean literature maintains a dual relationship with the culture of the former colonizers, hesita...
Being a contemporary Antiguan-American writer, Jamaica Kincaid in her writings explores the themes o...
This essay uses Sara Ahmed's theory of affect to analyze Jamaica Kincaid´s A Small Place. I argue th...
Jamaica Kincaid, arguably the most popular Caribbean woman writer living in the USA, has produced m...
Jamaica Kincaid\u27s novels Annie John and Lucy demonstrate a marked resistance to Western philosoph...
Caribbean literature exposes a history of dispossession, exploitation and oppression which has been ...
The Caribbean is characterized by a certain divided, or hybrid, identity created by the colonial sit...
The paper intends to reread Jamaica Kincaid’s short story, ‘Girl’ (1978) and provide new insights in...
AbstractThis paper deals with My Garden (Book): by Antiguan writer Jamaica Kincaid. The analysis cen...
Jamaica Kincaid is an American novelist, short-story writer, gardener, essayist, and reviewer. She h...
This essay argues that Jamaica Kincaid’s The Autobiography of My Mother depicts how the indigenous c...
Abstract: Jamaica Kincaid, arguably the most popular Caribbean woman writer living in the USA, has p...
The narrators of Jamaica Kincaid’s Annie John, Lucy, and A Small Place all struggle to form a cohere...