MaComère, Volume 1Association of Caribbean Women Writers and Scholars, 2001 |
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Page 44
... girl . Now , being a flower - girl was something I understood quite well . My cousin Yasmin , nine months younger than me , had already been a flower - girl at a wedding , and I had almost died of envy at the sight of her lovely taffeta ...
... girl . Now , being a flower - girl was something I understood quite well . My cousin Yasmin , nine months younger than me , had already been a flower - girl at a wedding , and I had almost died of envy at the sight of her lovely taffeta ...
Page 86
... girl who had only little boys for friends because the girls were only concerned with banalities , because girls had the habit of tearing each other to pieces , because , in reality , the girls I had the opportunity to meet never had the ...
... girl who had only little boys for friends because the girls were only concerned with banalities , because girls had the habit of tearing each other to pieces , because , in reality , the girls I had the opportunity to meet never had the ...
Page 134
... Girl , Brownstones and Praisesong for the Widow . In Brown Girl , Brownstones the plangent echo of Selina's Barbadian bracelet which she bequeaths to the kin whose broken and shattered lives silently inhabit the wasteland from which she ...
... Girl , Brownstones and Praisesong for the Widow . In Brown Girl , Brownstones the plangent echo of Selina's Barbadian bracelet which she bequeaths to the kin whose broken and shattered lives silently inhabit the wasteland from which she ...
Table des matières
Women of Colour at the Barricades | 8 |
Creative Works | 17 |
Kings Street | 23 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
African American appeared become begins Beryl body born British called Caribbean characters child collection colonial coming connection continue Creole critical cultural dance dark daughter death desire discourse English exile experience eyes face father feel female gender girl give Haitian hand identity images important Julia language learned leave linguistic literary literature live London look male Mayotte meaning memory Miss mother move never notes novel oppression person poem political position possibility present published question racial relations resistance sense sexual silence slave social society song space speak spirit story Studies subjectivity symbol talk tell things Tituba tongue translation turn understand University voice West Indian woman women writers writing written York young