Caribbean Poetics: Towards an Aesthetic of West Indian Literature

Front Cover
Peepal Tree, 2013 - Literary Criticism - 420 pages

Studying the literature written in the West Indies as a regionally unified corpus with its own identity, this analysis examines the recurring thematic motifs and formal devices that Caribbean literary artists have drawn from during the last six decades. The dynamic study isolates the writers' engagements with language, religion, and history as primary components of their cultural discourse and argues that West Indian literary texts contain clues to their own explication. Including authors from the Dominican Republic, Barbados, and Haiti, this volume is one of the few that explores the writing of all Caribbean language regions. Revised to include updated criticism of three featured poets--Kamau Brathwaite, Pedro Mir, and Rene Depestre--this insightful and profound discussion presents a truly multicultural approach to literature.

Contents

Preface to the Second Edition
7
The Unity of Caribbean Literature
26
Towards a Caribbean Poetics
69
Kamau Brathwaite and the Caribbean World
109
Stages of the Sacred in René Depestre
175
Pedro Mir and the Historical Imagination
233
Conclusion Towards a Decentralised Literary Order
296
Caribbean Poetics in a New Century
321
Works Cited
352
Index
395
Copyright

About the author (2013)

Silvio Torres-Saillant is an associate professor and director of the Latino-Latin American studies program at Syracuse University, the founder of the Dominican Studies Institute in New York City, and the senior editor of The Oxford Encyclopedia of Latinos and Latinas in the United States. He is the author of An Intellectual History of the Caribbean, An Introduction to Dominican Blackness, and La Orilla: Hacia Una Nacionalidad. He lives in New York City.

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