Allegories of Desire: Body, Nation, and Empire in Modern Caribbean Literature by WomenBloomsbury Academic, 23 févr. 2004 - 209 pages This book explores the relationship between famous and fictional Caribbean female bodies to literary and historical writing. |
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... abeng . Cliff appropriates this device as a metonymic referent for Nanny in the title of her first novel about Clare Savage . The word itself , which comes from the Akan language , means horn . Through the abeng , which took the form of ...
... Abeng did not have a long lifespan , the members of that collective , along with those of more overtly Marxist nationalist groups , including the one that would later become the Worker's Party of Jamaica ( WPJ ) , were eventually ...
... abeng , one of the major difficulties with Black Power was that it did extend the spectrum of blackness to include those like Clare who appeared white but were also of African ancestry or who were middle class but had roots in the ...
Table des matières
of a Dream Deferred | 15 |
Imagining History | 51 |
Edwidge Danticat Jan J Dominique and the | 85 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Références à ce livre
What Women Lose: Exile and the Construction of Imaginary Homelands in Novels ... María Cristina Rodríguez Affichage d'extraits - 2005 |
What Women Lose: Exile and the Construction of Imaginary Homelands in Novels ... María Cristina Rodríguez Affichage d'extraits - 2005 |