MaComère, Volume 2Association of Caribbean Women Writers and Scholars, 1999 |
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... language , has taken on a structure and a meaning which is indigenous to the Caribbean . The word is spelled in this way instead of in the clearly Creole manner ( macumé , or makumeh , or macoomé , macomeh or any other variant ) , so ...
... language , has taken on a structure and a meaning which is indigenous to the Caribbean . The word is spelled in this way instead of in the clearly Creole manner ( macumé , or makumeh , or macoomé , macomeh or any other variant ) , so ...
Page 17
... language . Was that intentional ? ED : Yes , because this was a case where language was so poignant . It's also the case where you have one island and two people speaking different languages . Then the American occupation of the whole ...
... language . Was that intentional ? ED : Yes , because this was a case where language was so poignant . It's also the case where you have one island and two people speaking different languages . Then the American occupation of the whole ...
Page 103
... language and action , at the same time warning that doing so involves a process of self - revelation which is often fraught with danger . Kincaid , however , seems to circumvent the danger . While self - revelation is her agenda , she ...
... language and action , at the same time warning that doing so involves a process of self - revelation which is often fraught with danger . Kincaid , however , seems to circumvent the danger . While self - revelation is her agenda , she ...
Table des matières
Renée H Shea | 12 |
Christine W Sizemore | 23 |
Whats Important? | 36 |
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activists African diaspora Amabelle Annie John Antoinette Antoinette's Autobiography Bessie Head black women Caribbean Women child colonial color Congress of Black Creole cultural Danticat daughter discourse Dominican Dorothy dreams Edwidge Edwidge Danticat English Exil experience farming of bones Feminist fiction Fleurette Osborne French gender girl Gisèle glassblowing Guadeloupe Haiti Haitian Head's identity images interview jablesse Jamaica Kincaid jamette Jan Shinebourne Jean Rhys Kassav Krak Krik language lesbian literary literature lives MaComère madness Martinique Maryse Condé massacre metaphor mother narrative narrator novel obeah obeah woman oral Pineau's political praisesong Question of Power radical readers relationship resistance Rhys Rhys's River sexual singing social song sorcière South African spirit story strategy teacher tell Télumée Tituba tradition transformation voice West Indian white creole Wide Sargasso Sea Willoughby Women of Canada Women Writers words writing Xuela York