MaComère, Volume 4Association of Caribbean Women Writers and Scholars, 2001 |
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Page 13
... poem " A Farewell Song . " After my grandmother died , I tried many times to write a poem about her , but nothing worked . Probably because I was unable to go to her funeral , she was still very much alive in my head just as she had ...
... poem " A Farewell Song . " After my grandmother died , I tried many times to write a poem about her , but nothing worked . Probably because I was unable to go to her funeral , she was still very much alive in my head just as she had ...
Page 20
... poem in the second section " I COULD BLOW SOME NASTY POWDERS OVER THESE New York streets .... " Why do you stay in first person when the speaker is obviously not yourself ? MP : I think the " I " is a way of engaging the reader in a ...
... poem in the second section " I COULD BLOW SOME NASTY POWDERS OVER THESE New York streets .... " Why do you stay in first person when the speaker is obviously not yourself ? MP : I think the " I " is a way of engaging the reader in a ...
Page 196
... poems tell the story of a life , Adisa's , beginning with her birth and ending with her leery acceptance of middle age . Often , a thought begun in one poem is finished in another , like her beginning : " it is not from my mother's womb ...
... poems tell the story of a life , Adisa's , beginning with her birth and ending with her leery acceptance of middle age . Often , a thought begun in one poem is finished in another , like her beginning : " it is not from my mother's womb ...
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African American become beginning body called Caribbean Celia characters child collection colonial color comes como connection Cuba cultural daughter describes diaspora Dominican English Erzulie experience explores eyes father feel female fiction final forced girl Haitian hand head idea identity Indian ISBN island land language leave Literature lives London look Lourdes Lucy Mariah meaning Melville memory mother mujer narrative narrator never notion novel painting past physical Pilar poems political present Puerto Rico question reader relationship ritual river role seems sense sexual social society space story Studies talk tell things turned understand University voice West woman women writing York young