Kenneth Ramchand\u27s The West Indian Novel and Its Background is a useful guide for exploring this literature. First published in 1973 and reissued in 1983, Ramchand\u27s book (which has a complete bibliography of West Indian writers) gives us some of the information necessary to understand the difficulties facing the offspring of British colonialism in the West Indies
Book Review: Racism, Colonialism, and Indigeneity in Canada: A Reader, Edited by Martin J. Cann...
This study, based on novels written originally in English by writers from English-speaking West Indi...
This is an extremely learned work. Published originally by the Pan American Institute of History and...
This book makes a simple, but important, point and proves it on the basis of painstaking research: p...
That there is a substantial fiction from the West Indies and that a relatively high proportion of i...
Gikandi, has added an excellent critical work to his earlier volumes on new African writers. Employi...
The introduction to this thesis argues that it is not yet possible to exclude awareness of the soci...
One of the best ways to introduce readers to the diversity of Indian literatures (and, by implicatio...
Ian Smart has made, as he himself asserts in the Author\u27s Foreword, a very limited approach to ...
An review essay imagining a future scholar writing a review of Tabish Khair's novel The Thing about ...
A review of The White Woman\u27s Other Burden : Western Women and South Asia during British Rule by...
From the outset, the reader must be aware of encountering a rarity indeed: a first class scholar who...
Review of Bindi: Multifaceted Lives of Indo-Caribbean Women by Rossanne Kanhai; Kingston: University...
Raymond William Stedman approaches the pervasive stereotyping of American Indians with the awe of th...
Without Indians-or, rather, their imaginings of them-white Americans would hardly know how to define...
Book Review: Racism, Colonialism, and Indigeneity in Canada: A Reader, Edited by Martin J. Cann...
This study, based on novels written originally in English by writers from English-speaking West Indi...
This is an extremely learned work. Published originally by the Pan American Institute of History and...
This book makes a simple, but important, point and proves it on the basis of painstaking research: p...
That there is a substantial fiction from the West Indies and that a relatively high proportion of i...
Gikandi, has added an excellent critical work to his earlier volumes on new African writers. Employi...
The introduction to this thesis argues that it is not yet possible to exclude awareness of the soci...
One of the best ways to introduce readers to the diversity of Indian literatures (and, by implicatio...
Ian Smart has made, as he himself asserts in the Author\u27s Foreword, a very limited approach to ...
An review essay imagining a future scholar writing a review of Tabish Khair's novel The Thing about ...
A review of The White Woman\u27s Other Burden : Western Women and South Asia during British Rule by...
From the outset, the reader must be aware of encountering a rarity indeed: a first class scholar who...
Review of Bindi: Multifaceted Lives of Indo-Caribbean Women by Rossanne Kanhai; Kingston: University...
Raymond William Stedman approaches the pervasive stereotyping of American Indians with the awe of th...
Without Indians-or, rather, their imaginings of them-white Americans would hardly know how to define...
Book Review: Racism, Colonialism, and Indigeneity in Canada: A Reader, Edited by Martin J. Cann...
This study, based on novels written originally in English by writers from English-speaking West Indi...
This is an extremely learned work. Published originally by the Pan American Institute of History and...