MaComère, Volume 4Association of Caribbean Women Writers and Scholars, 2001 |
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Page 100
... Jamaica Kincaid's Annie John . ” Callaloo 13.2 ( 1990 ) : 326-340 . Niesen de Abruna , Laura . " Family Connections : Mother and Mother Country in the Fiction of Jean Rhys and Jamaica Kincaid . ” Motherlands . Ed . Susheila Nasta ...
... Jamaica Kincaid's Annie John . ” Callaloo 13.2 ( 1990 ) : 326-340 . Niesen de Abruna , Laura . " Family Connections : Mother and Mother Country in the Fiction of Jean Rhys and Jamaica Kincaid . ” Motherlands . Ed . Susheila Nasta ...
Page 175
... Jamaica come to preoccupy much of the novel . The term " indentations " proves especially telling as a metaphor of the temporal and spatial effects of colonialism upon the island and its people : first , the term implies a power ...
... Jamaica come to preoccupy much of the novel . The term " indentations " proves especially telling as a metaphor of the temporal and spatial effects of colonialism upon the island and its people : first , the term implies a power ...
Page 177
... Jamaica was considered among the most brutal . They did not know that the death rate of Africans in Jamaica under slavery exceeded the rate of birth , and that the growth of the slave population from 1,500 in 1655 to 311,070 in 1834 ...
... Jamaica was considered among the most brutal . They did not know that the death rate of Africans in Jamaica under slavery exceeded the rate of birth , and that the growth of the slave population from 1,500 in 1655 to 311,070 in 1834 ...
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