Caribbean Literature in Transition, 1800-1920: Volume 1 (eBook, PDF)
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Caribbean Literature in Transition, 1800-1920: Volume 1 (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: O'Callaghan, Evelyn
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This volume explores Caribbean literature from 1800-1920 across genres and in the multiple languages of the Caribbean.
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This volume explores Caribbean literature from 1800-1920 across genres and in the multiple languages of the Caribbean.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Januar 2021
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781108654043
- Artikelnr.: 66180638
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Januar 2021
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781108654043
- Artikelnr.: 66180638
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
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.