Johanna X. K. Garvey is associate professor of English, founding codirector of Black Studies, and founding codirector of Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies at Fairfield University. She is coeditor (with Caroline A. Brown) of Madness in Black Women's Diasporic Fiction: Aesthetics of Resistance, has published in many scholarly journals including Callaloo, Anthurium, and Textual Practice, and has contributed to numerous volumes, including Black Imagination and the Middle Passage; Black Liberation in the Americas; Emerging Perspectives on Maryse Conde: A Writer of Her Own; and Black Female Sexualities.
Request Academic Copy
Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form
Description
Acknowledgments Introduction: The Caribbean Atlantic: Trauma, Relation, Resistance Part One: Plumbing the Depths Chapter 1: Watery Webs Weave Stories: Unblocking the Salt Roads in Marshall, Cliff, and Hopkinson Chapter 2: Oceanic Ossuaries: Caribbean Women Reading the Bones Part Two: Voicing the Wounds Chapter 3: Words to Heal the Wounds: Amnesia, Madness, and Silence as Testimony in Haitian Women's Fiction Chapter 4: "I Hear the Voice": Performing the African Diaspora in Brodber and Hurston Part Three: Unsettling Borders Chapter 5: Mapping the Body: Caribbean Migrations in Tessa McWatt's Fiction Chapter 6: Caribbean Boundary Crossings: Undoing the Violence of Borders in Santos-Febres and Lara Conclusion: Beyond the Door: Journeys to the Free Notes Works Cited Index
The Sides of the Sea: Caribbean Women Writing Diaspora breaks new ground in the scope and perspectives of its various analyses and will be a worthy addition to the library of studies of Caribbean women's literature. - H. Adlai Murdoch, author of Creolizing the Metropole: Migrant Caribbean Identities in Literature and Film