Caribbean Literature in Transition, 1800-1920: Volume 1
Herausgeber: O'Callaghan, Evelyn; Watson, Tim
Caribbean Literature in Transition, 1800-1920: Volume 1
Herausgeber: O'Callaghan, Evelyn; Watson, Tim
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Maps out a history of the region's literary production alongside a history of its reception and interpretation. It provides new critical approaches that will open up future scholarly engagement with early Caribbean literature.
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Maps out a history of the region's literary production alongside a history of its reception and interpretation. It provides new critical approaches that will open up future scholarly engagement with early Caribbean literature.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Caribbean Literature in Transition
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 498
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Januar 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 196mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 862g
- ISBN-13: 9781108475884
- ISBN-10: 1108475884
- Artikelnr.: 60403163
- Caribbean Literature in Transition
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 498
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Januar 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 196mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 862g
- ISBN-13: 9781108475884
- ISBN-10: 1108475884
- Artikelnr.: 60403163
Introduction Evelyn O'Callaghan and Tim Watson, with contributions from
Marlene L. Daut; Part I. Literary and Generic Transitions: 1. Conquest
Narratives Kelly Wisecup; 2. Creole Testimonies in Caribbean Women's Slave
Narratives Nicole N. Aljoe; 3. Jonkanoo Performances of Resistance,
Freedom, and Memory Jenna M. Gibbs; 4. Caribbean Picturesque from William
Beckford to Contemporary Tourism Evelyn O'Callaghan; 5. From Novels of the
Caribbean, to Caribbean Novels Candace Ward; 6. Early Caribbean Poetry and
the Modern Reader John T. Gilmore; 7. Towards a West Indian Romance Poetics
Rhonda Kareen Harrison; Part II. Cultural and Political Transitions: 8.
John Jacob Thomas and the grammar of freedom Faith L. Smith; 9. How
Barbados transformed radical British author Eliza Fenwick into a
reactionary Lissa Paul; 10. Mary Seacole's travels and tales Norval (Nadi)
Edwards; 11. Genealogy and nonhistory in Adolphus, A Tale RJ Boutelle; 12.
Obeah, religion, and nineteenth-century literature of the Anglophone
Caribbean Janelle Rodriques; Part III. The Caribbean Region In Transition:
13. Antillean Sovereignty in Pan-Caribbean Writing Marlene L. Daut; 14.
Caribbean Literature as Diasporic Archive Rhonda Cobham-Sander; 15. The
Representation of the Caribbean in Nineteenth-Century African American
Newspapers Curdella Forbes; 16. The Impact of the American Civil War on
Political Writing in Jamaica and Cuba Jonathon T. Booth; 17. South Asian
Migration and Settlement Stories, 1800-1920 Atreyee Phukan; 18.
Francophone-Anglophone Connections in the Nineteenth-Century Caribbean
Elizabeth Kelly; 19. Cuban Literature before 1920: Antislavery,
Historiography, Women's Writing, and the Nation Daylet Domínguez; 20. José
Martí, José Rizal, and their Speculative Extended Caribbean Susan Gillmaz;
21. Translating the Revolution from Haiti to Louisiana Sarah Jessica
Johnson; Part IV. Critical Transitions: 22. Creative Rewritings of Early
Caribbean Texts Sheri-Marie Harrison; 23. Digital Restaging of Early
Caribbean texts Laurie N. Taylor; 24. Lost Mothers in the Caribbean
Plantation and Contemporary Black Maternal and Infant Mortality Kerry
Sinanan; 25. Reading the Colonial Archive through Joscelyn Gardner's Creole
Portraits I-III Melanie Otto.
Marlene L. Daut; Part I. Literary and Generic Transitions: 1. Conquest
Narratives Kelly Wisecup; 2. Creole Testimonies in Caribbean Women's Slave
Narratives Nicole N. Aljoe; 3. Jonkanoo Performances of Resistance,
Freedom, and Memory Jenna M. Gibbs; 4. Caribbean Picturesque from William
Beckford to Contemporary Tourism Evelyn O'Callaghan; 5. From Novels of the
Caribbean, to Caribbean Novels Candace Ward; 6. Early Caribbean Poetry and
the Modern Reader John T. Gilmore; 7. Towards a West Indian Romance Poetics
Rhonda Kareen Harrison; Part II. Cultural and Political Transitions: 8.
John Jacob Thomas and the grammar of freedom Faith L. Smith; 9. How
Barbados transformed radical British author Eliza Fenwick into a
reactionary Lissa Paul; 10. Mary Seacole's travels and tales Norval (Nadi)
Edwards; 11. Genealogy and nonhistory in Adolphus, A Tale RJ Boutelle; 12.
Obeah, religion, and nineteenth-century literature of the Anglophone
Caribbean Janelle Rodriques; Part III. The Caribbean Region In Transition:
13. Antillean Sovereignty in Pan-Caribbean Writing Marlene L. Daut; 14.
Caribbean Literature as Diasporic Archive Rhonda Cobham-Sander; 15. The
Representation of the Caribbean in Nineteenth-Century African American
Newspapers Curdella Forbes; 16. The Impact of the American Civil War on
Political Writing in Jamaica and Cuba Jonathon T. Booth; 17. South Asian
Migration and Settlement Stories, 1800-1920 Atreyee Phukan; 18.
Francophone-Anglophone Connections in the Nineteenth-Century Caribbean
Elizabeth Kelly; 19. Cuban Literature before 1920: Antislavery,
Historiography, Women's Writing, and the Nation Daylet Domínguez; 20. José
Martí, José Rizal, and their Speculative Extended Caribbean Susan Gillmaz;
21. Translating the Revolution from Haiti to Louisiana Sarah Jessica
Johnson; Part IV. Critical Transitions: 22. Creative Rewritings of Early
Caribbean Texts Sheri-Marie Harrison; 23. Digital Restaging of Early
Caribbean texts Laurie N. Taylor; 24. Lost Mothers in the Caribbean
Plantation and Contemporary Black Maternal and Infant Mortality Kerry
Sinanan; 25. Reading the Colonial Archive through Joscelyn Gardner's Creole
Portraits I-III Melanie Otto.
Introduction Evelyn O'Callaghan and Tim Watson, with contributions from
Marlene L. Daut; Part I. Literary and Generic Transitions: 1. Conquest
Narratives Kelly Wisecup; 2. Creole Testimonies in Caribbean Women's Slave
Narratives Nicole N. Aljoe; 3. Jonkanoo Performances of Resistance,
Freedom, and Memory Jenna M. Gibbs; 4. Caribbean Picturesque from William
Beckford to Contemporary Tourism Evelyn O'Callaghan; 5. From Novels of the
Caribbean, to Caribbean Novels Candace Ward; 6. Early Caribbean Poetry and
the Modern Reader John T. Gilmore; 7. Towards a West Indian Romance Poetics
Rhonda Kareen Harrison; Part II. Cultural and Political Transitions: 8.
John Jacob Thomas and the grammar of freedom Faith L. Smith; 9. How
Barbados transformed radical British author Eliza Fenwick into a
reactionary Lissa Paul; 10. Mary Seacole's travels and tales Norval (Nadi)
Edwards; 11. Genealogy and nonhistory in Adolphus, A Tale RJ Boutelle; 12.
Obeah, religion, and nineteenth-century literature of the Anglophone
Caribbean Janelle Rodriques; Part III. The Caribbean Region In Transition:
13. Antillean Sovereignty in Pan-Caribbean Writing Marlene L. Daut; 14.
Caribbean Literature as Diasporic Archive Rhonda Cobham-Sander; 15. The
Representation of the Caribbean in Nineteenth-Century African American
Newspapers Curdella Forbes; 16. The Impact of the American Civil War on
Political Writing in Jamaica and Cuba Jonathon T. Booth; 17. South Asian
Migration and Settlement Stories, 1800-1920 Atreyee Phukan; 18.
Francophone-Anglophone Connections in the Nineteenth-Century Caribbean
Elizabeth Kelly; 19. Cuban Literature before 1920: Antislavery,
Historiography, Women's Writing, and the Nation Daylet Domínguez; 20. José
Martí, José Rizal, and their Speculative Extended Caribbean Susan Gillmaz;
21. Translating the Revolution from Haiti to Louisiana Sarah Jessica
Johnson; Part IV. Critical Transitions: 22. Creative Rewritings of Early
Caribbean Texts Sheri-Marie Harrison; 23. Digital Restaging of Early
Caribbean texts Laurie N. Taylor; 24. Lost Mothers in the Caribbean
Plantation and Contemporary Black Maternal and Infant Mortality Kerry
Sinanan; 25. Reading the Colonial Archive through Joscelyn Gardner's Creole
Portraits I-III Melanie Otto.
Marlene L. Daut; Part I. Literary and Generic Transitions: 1. Conquest
Narratives Kelly Wisecup; 2. Creole Testimonies in Caribbean Women's Slave
Narratives Nicole N. Aljoe; 3. Jonkanoo Performances of Resistance,
Freedom, and Memory Jenna M. Gibbs; 4. Caribbean Picturesque from William
Beckford to Contemporary Tourism Evelyn O'Callaghan; 5. From Novels of the
Caribbean, to Caribbean Novels Candace Ward; 6. Early Caribbean Poetry and
the Modern Reader John T. Gilmore; 7. Towards a West Indian Romance Poetics
Rhonda Kareen Harrison; Part II. Cultural and Political Transitions: 8.
John Jacob Thomas and the grammar of freedom Faith L. Smith; 9. How
Barbados transformed radical British author Eliza Fenwick into a
reactionary Lissa Paul; 10. Mary Seacole's travels and tales Norval (Nadi)
Edwards; 11. Genealogy and nonhistory in Adolphus, A Tale RJ Boutelle; 12.
Obeah, religion, and nineteenth-century literature of the Anglophone
Caribbean Janelle Rodriques; Part III. The Caribbean Region In Transition:
13. Antillean Sovereignty in Pan-Caribbean Writing Marlene L. Daut; 14.
Caribbean Literature as Diasporic Archive Rhonda Cobham-Sander; 15. The
Representation of the Caribbean in Nineteenth-Century African American
Newspapers Curdella Forbes; 16. The Impact of the American Civil War on
Political Writing in Jamaica and Cuba Jonathon T. Booth; 17. South Asian
Migration and Settlement Stories, 1800-1920 Atreyee Phukan; 18.
Francophone-Anglophone Connections in the Nineteenth-Century Caribbean
Elizabeth Kelly; 19. Cuban Literature before 1920: Antislavery,
Historiography, Women's Writing, and the Nation Daylet Domínguez; 20. José
Martí, José Rizal, and their Speculative Extended Caribbean Susan Gillmaz;
21. Translating the Revolution from Haiti to Louisiana Sarah Jessica
Johnson; Part IV. Critical Transitions: 22. Creative Rewritings of Early
Caribbean Texts Sheri-Marie Harrison; 23. Digital Restaging of Early
Caribbean texts Laurie N. Taylor; 24. Lost Mothers in the Caribbean
Plantation and Contemporary Black Maternal and Infant Mortality Kerry
Sinanan; 25. Reading the Colonial Archive through Joscelyn Gardner's Creole
Portraits I-III Melanie Otto.