Linton Kwesi Johnson Artist-In-Residence | Fall 2014 Institute of African American Affairs New York University Linton Kwesi Johnson Fall 2014 Artist-In-Residence

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Linton Kwesi Johnson Artist-In-Residence | Fall 2014 Institute of African American Affairs New York University Linton Kwesi Johnson Fall 2014 Artist-In-Residence Institute of African American Affairs presents PHOTO © DANNY DA COSTA Linton Kwesi Johnson Artist-in-Residence | Fall 2014 Institute of African American Affairs New York University Linton Kwesi Johnson Fall 2014 Artist-in-Residence THE PROGRAMS FRIDAY, SEPT 19, 2014 / 7:30 PM Linton Kwesi Johnson main lecture: “African Consciousness in Reggae Music” Growing up in London, reggae music provided Johnson with not only a sense of identity but also a career as a successful recording artist and performer. Kimmel Center – NYU • Rosenthal Pavilion • 10th Floor PHOTO © DANNY DA COSTA DA © DANNY PHOTO 60 Washington Square South • New York, NY THE ARTIST TUESDAY, SEPT 23, 2014 / 7:00 PM Linton Kwesi Johnson is a Jamaican-born British national An Evening of Poetry whose work focuses on African Caribbean cultural expressions in poetry and reggae music, from both sides of the Atlantic during with Linton Kwesi Johnson a career spanning over four decades. The program of events for Johnson’s brief tenure at NYU–IAAA will include examining these followed by discussion chaired by British Caribbean novelist and fields of artistic creativity. Johnson will also take the opportunity essayist, Caryl Phillips, Professor of English at Yale University. to draw on the expertise of some eminent friends in the academy Kimmel Center – NYU • E&L Auditorium • 4th Floor with the aim of engaging students and members of the public in 60 Washington Square South • New York, NY the discussions. Johnson was born in Chapleton, in the parish of Clarendon, Jamaica. After moving to London at an early age and later attending the University of London’s Goldsmiths College, he FRIDAY, SEPT 26, 2014 / 6:00 PM began writing politically charged poetry. Johnson’s dub poetry, with its culturally specific Jamaican patois dialect and reggae backbeat, Mervyn Morris on Louise Bennett was a precursor to the spoken word and rap music movements. Mervyn Morris, Jamaica’s poet laureate, talk on Louise Bennett, His earlier books of poetry, 1974’s Voices of the Living and the Dead, the mother of Jamaican language poetry, followed by discussion 1975’s Dread, Beat An’ Blood and 1980’s Inglan Is A Bitch, gained chaired by Linton Kwesi Johnson. wide recognition, especially among the politically and socially conscious. In 2002, Johnson became the first black poet and the NYU Law School • D’Agostino Hall • Room: Lipton Hall second living poet to be published in the prestigious Penguin 108 West Third Street • New York, NY Modern Classics series. FRIDAY, OCT 10, 2014 / 6:00 PM He also released several albums of his work, including Dread Beat An’ Blood and Forces of Victory, both released in the late 1970s; and An Evening of Caribbean Poetry Bass Culture and Making History, in 1980 and 1984, respectively. Some of Johnson’s distinguished awards include an Honorary with Kwame Dawes (Jamaica/Ghana), Lauren Alleyne (Trinidad), Visiting Professorship at Middlesex University in London (2004), Olive Senior (Jamaica) and Vladimir Lucien (St. Lucia) reading and a silver Musgrave medal from the Institute of Jamaica for from their works — chaired by Kwame Dawes. distinguished eminence in the field of poetry (2005). His work has been translated into several languages and he has toured extensively NYU Law School • D’Agostino Hall • Room: Lipton Hall throughout Europe, Japan, South Africa, Brazil and other nations. 108 West Third Street • New York, NY For Johnson’s extensive list of publications and records please visit www.lintonkwesijohnson.com. All programs introduced by Dr. Ifeona Fulani, (Source: “Linton Kwesi Johnson.” Bio. A&E Television Networks, 2014. Web.) Global Liberal Studies Program, New York University Lauren K. Alleyne is the author of Difficult Fruit (Peepal Tree Press, 2014). She holds a Master of Fine Arts degree, and a graduate certificate in Feminist, Gender and Sexuality Studies from Cornell University, and an MA in English and Creative Writing from Iowa State University. Alleyne’s fiction, non-fiction, interviews and poetry have been widely published in journals and anthologies such as Women’s Studies Quarterly, Guernica, The Caribbean Writer, Black Arts Quarterly, The Cimarron Review, Crab Orchard Review, Gathering Ground, and Growing Up Girl, among others. Alleyne is a Cave Canem graduate, and is originally from Trinidad and Tobago. She is currently the Poet-in- Residence, and an Assistant Professor of English at the University of Dubuque in Dubuque, IA. Kwame Dawes is the author of sixteen collections of poetry, including, most recently, Duppy Conqueror, Wheels, Back of Mount Peace, and Hope’s Hospice. Born in Ghana, Dawes spent most of his childhood and early adult life in Jamaica. He has also published two novels, Bivouac and She’s Gone, winner of the 2008 Hurston/Wright Legacy Award for Best First Novel. An accomplished actor, playwright, and producer, fifteen of his plays have been produced, and he has acted in, directed, or produced several of these productions himself, most recently One Love at the Lyric Hammersmith in London. His essays have appeared in numerous journals including Bomb Magazine, The London Review of Books, Granta, Essence, World Literature Today, and Double Take Magazine. Until July 2011, Dawes was Distinguished Poet in Residence, Louis Frye Scudder Professor of Liberal Arts, PHOTO: RACHEL ELIZA GRIFFITHS and founder and executive director of the South Carolina Poetry Initiative. Ifeona Fulani teaches in the Global Liberal Studies Program at New York University. Her recent publications include Archipelagos of Sound: Transnational Caribbeanities, Women and Music (University of West Indies Press, 2012), an edited volume of essays, and a collection of short stories titled Ten Days in Jamaica, (Peepal Tree Press, 2012). She is also the author of a novel, Seasons of Dust (1997), and has published short stories in the Beacon’s Best anthology series, in Small Axe, and in Black Renaissance/Renaissance Noir. Her scholarly articles have been published in journals such as Small Axe, Anthurium and Frontiers: A Journal of Women’s Studies. She holds an MFA in PHOTO: GREG SALVATORI Creative Writing and a PhD in Comparative Literature, both from New York University. Vladimir Lucien is a writer from St. Lucia. His work has been published in several journals such as the Caribbean Review of Books, Wasafiri, The PN Review, BIM Magazine, Caribbean Beat and other journals, as well as an anthology Beyond Sangre Grande, edited by Cyril Dabydeen. He is also the screenwriter of the documentary The Merikins which premiered at the Trinidad and Tobago Film Festival in 2012. Mervyn Morris was born in Kingston, Jamaica and studied at the University College of the West Indies and as a Rhodes Scholar, at St. Edmund Hall, Oxford. He was on the staff of the University of the West Indies, Mona, from 1966 until 2002, retiring as Professor Emeritus of Creative Writing and West Indian Literature. He is the author of Is English We Speaking and Other Essays (1999), Making West Indian Literature (2005) and Miss Lou: Louise Bennett and Jamaican Culture (Ian Randle Publishers, Kingston, 2014). His books of poetry include The Pond, Shadowboxing, Examination Centre (New Beacon Books, London), On Holy Week (Dangaroo Press, Sydney), and I been there, sort of: New and Selected Poems (Carcanet Press, Manchester, 2006). He has recently been appointed Jamaica’s Poet Laureate. Caryl Phillips was born in St.Kitts, West Indies, and brought up in England. He is the author of numerous books of non-fiction and fiction.Dancing in the Dark won the 2006 PEN/Beyond Margins Award, and A Distant Shore won the 2004 Commonwealth Writers Prize. His other awards include the Martin Luther King Memorial Prize, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for Crossing the River, which was also short-listed for the Booker Prize. He has written extensively for the stage, television, and film, and is a regular contributor to newspapers and magazines on both sides of the Atlantic. He is a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, and holds honorary doctorates from a number of universities. He has taught at universities in Singapore, Ghana, Sweden and Barbados and is currently Professor of English at Yale University. Olive Senior was born and brought up in Jamaica and educated in Jamaica and Canada. Her prizewinning collection of stories includes Summer Lightning, which won the Commonwealth Writers Prize. Her novel, Dancing Lessons, was published in Canada in 2011 and an illustrated children’s book, Birthday Suit in 2012. Her poetry books are Shell, (shortlisted for the Pat Lowther Award), Over the Roofs of the World (shortlisted for Canada’s Governor-General’s Literary Award and Cuba’s Casa de las Americas Prize), Gardening in the Tropics (winner of the F.J. Bressani Literary Prize), and Talking of Trees. Olive Senior’s non-fiction works on Caribbean culture include the A-Z of Jamaican Heritage and several others. She is the recipient of numerous awards and prizes, and has worked internationally as a creative writing teacher and lecturer on Caribbean literature and culture. Currently she is on the faculty of the Humber School for Writers, Toronto. The book Olive Senior by Denise deCaires Narain has recently been published by Northcote House Publishers in the UK. …the newest and most original poetic form to have emerged in the English language in the last quarter century. — Fred D’Aguiar, poet and novelist ” …his poetry is meant to recoup lost structures, identities, pure ‘rhythm and roots,’ poetry integrating audience and performer in one collective voice. — Cyril Dabydeen, World Literature Today ” The name Linton Kwesi Johnson conjures up images of leadership, strong views and direction. He is the acknowledged head of the new wave of performance poets, whose words welded politics and social conscience with a potent challenge to those in power.
Recommended publications
  • MW Bocasjudge'stalk Link
    1 Bocas Judge’s talk To be given May 4 2019 Marina Warner April 27 2019 The Bocas de Dragon the Mouths of the Dragon, which give this marvellous festival its name evoke for me the primary material of stories, songs, poems in the imagination of things which isn’t available to our physical senses – the beings and creatures – like mermaids, like dragons – which every culture has created and questioned and enjoyed – thrilled to and wondered at. But the word Bocas also calls to our minds the organ through which all the things made by human voices rise from the inner landscapes of our being - by which we survive, breathe, eat, and kiss. Boca in Latin would be os, which also means bone- as Derek Walcott remembers and plays on as he anatomises the word O-mer-os in his poem of that name. Perhaps the double meaning crystallises how, in so many myths and tales, musical instruments - flutes and pipes and lyres - originate from a bone, pierced or strung to play. Nola Hopkinson in the story she read for the Daughters of Africa launch imagined casting a spell with a pipe made from the bone of a black cat. When a bone-mouth begins to give voice – it often tells a story of where it came from and whose body it once belonged to: in a Scottish ballad, to a sister murdered by a sister, her rival for a boy. Bone-mouths speak of knowledge and experience, suffering and love, as do all the writers taking part in this festival and on this splendid short list.
    [Show full text]
  • Special Issue November/December 2015 Founding Editors Richard Georges David Knight Jr
    Special Issue November/December 2015 Founding Editors Richard Georges David Knight Jr. Consulting Editors Carla Acevedo-Yates Traci O’Dea Freeman Rogers Guest Editors Ayanna Gillian Lloyd Marsha Pearce Colin Robinson Art Direction Clayton Rhule Moko is a non-profit journal that publishes fiction, poetry, visual arts, and non-fiction essays that reflect a Caribbean heritage or experience. Our goal is to create networks with a Pan-Caribbean ethos in a way that is also sensitive to our location within the British and United States Virgin Islands. We embrace diversity of experience and self-expression. Moko seeks submissions from both established and emerging writers, artists, and scholars. We are interested in work that encourages questioning of our societies and ourselves. We encourage you to submit your best work to us whether it be new visual art, fiction, poetry, reviews, interviews, or essays on any topic relevant to the Caribbean experience. We publish in March, July, and November. www.mokomagazine.org Moko November 2015 Number 7 Moko (ISSN: 2333-2557) is published three times a year. Address correspondence to PO Box 25479, EIS 5113, Miami, Florida 33102-5479. Copyright © 2015 Moko. All rights reserved. All works published or displayed by Moko are owned by their respective authors. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, in creative works contained herein is entirely coincidental. 2 MOKO | CARIBBEAN ART LETTERS FIRING THE CANON TABLE OF CONTENTS Firing the Canon Guest Editorial 5 VISUAL ART Arriving in the Art World Marsha Pearce 7 Featured Artist Nominator Harley Davelaar Tirzo Martha 11 Versia Harris Annalee Davis 17 Alex David Kelly Richard Mark Rawlins 21 Kelley-Ann Lindo Deborah Anzinger 27 Jean-Claude Saintilus André Eugène 31 Lionel Villahermosa Loretta Collins Klobah 39 FICTION Holding Space Ayanna Gillian Lloyd 51 Featured Author Nominator Alake Pilgrim Monique Roffey 55 Anna Levi Monique Roffey 61 Brenda Lee Browne Joanne C.
    [Show full text]
  • Vol 23 / No. 1 & 2 / April/November 2015
    1 Vol 23 / No. 1 & 2 / April/November 2015 Volume 23 Nos. 1 & 2 April/November 2015 Published by the discipline of Literatures in English, University of the West Indies CREDITS Original image: Nadia Huggins Anu Lakhan (copy editor) Nadia Huggins (graphic designer) JWIL is published with the financial support of the Departments of Literatures in English of The University of the West Indies Enquiries should be sent to THE EDITORS Journal of West Indian Literature Department of Literatures in English, UWI Mona Kingston 7, JAMAICA, W.I. Tel. (876) 927-2217; Fax (876) 970-4232 e-mail: [email protected] OR Ms. Angela Trotman Department of Language, Linguistics and Literature Faculty of Humanities, UWI Cave Hill Campus P.O. Box 64, Bridgetown, BARBADOS, W.I. e-mail: [email protected] SUBSCRIPTION RATE US$20 per annum (two issues) or US$10 per issue Copyright © 2015 Journal of West Indian Literature ISSN (online): 2414-3030 EDITORIAL COMMITTEE Evelyn O’Callaghan (Editor in Chief) Michael A. Bucknor (Senior Editor) Glyne Griffith Rachel L. Mordecai Lisa Outar Ian Strachan BOOK REVIEW EDITOR Antonia MacDonald EDITORIAL BOARD Edward Baugh Victor Chang Alison Donnell Mark McWatt Maureen Warner-Lewis EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARD Laurence A. Breiner Rhonda Cobham-Sander Daniel Coleman Anne Collett Raphael Dalleo Denise deCaires Narain Curdella Forbes Aaron Kamugisha Geraldine Skeete Faith Smith Emily Taylor THE JOURNAL OF WEST INDIAN LITERATURE has been published twice-yearly by the Departments of Literatures in English of the University of the West Indies since October 1986. Edited by full time academics and with minimal funding or institutional support, the Journal originated at the same time as the first annual conference on West Indian Literature, the brainchild of Edward Baugh, Mervyn Morris and Mark McWatt.
    [Show full text]
  • St. Martin Book Fair Program — June 4 – 6, 2020
    Poster pics of guest authors on the PROGRAM cover | St. Martin Book Fair 2020 L-R, Row 1: Verene Shepherd (Jamaica), Dannabang Kuwabong (Ghanaian/Canadian), Nicole Erna Mae Francis Cotton (St. Martin), Yvonne Weekes (Montserrat/Barbados), Nicole Cage (Martinique), Vladimir Lucien (St. Lucia); Row 2: Ashanti Dinah Orozco Herrera (Colombia), Karen Lord (Barbados), Jean Antoine-Dunne (Trinidad and Tobago/Ireland), Fola Gadet (Guadeloupe), A-dZiko Simba Gegele (Jamaica); Row 3: Richard Georges (Virgin Islands), Sean Taegar (Belize), Jeannine Hall Gailey (USA), Rafael Nino Féliz (Dominican Republic), Stéphanie Melyon-Reinette (Guadeloupe), Fabian Adekunle Badejo (St. Martin); Row 4: Sonia Williams (Barbados), Adrian Fraser (St. Vincent and the Grenadines), Steen Andersen (Denmark), Max Rippon (Marie-Galante, Sirissa Rawlins Sabourin (St. Kitts and Nevis); Row 5: Patricia Turnbull (Virgin Islands), Doris Dumabin (Guadeloupe), René E. Baly (St. Martin/USA), Lili Forbes (St. Martin/USA), Antonio Carmona Báez (Puerto Rico/St. Martin). *** Guest speakers/presenters, L-R: Cozier Frederick (Dominica), Minister for Environment, Rural Modernisation and Kalinago Upliftment; Lorenzo Sanford (Dominica), Chief of the Kalinago People (Dominica); Jean Arnell (St. Martin), Managing Partner and IT Specialist Computech. Click link to see all program activities: www.facebook.com/stmartin.bookfair Purpose and Objectives of the St. Martin Book Fair VISION To be the dynamic platform for books and information on and about St. Martin; establishing an eventful meeting place for the national literature of St. Martin and the literary cultures of the Caribbean; networking with literary cultures from around the world. MISSION STATEMENT To develop a marketplace for the multifaceted and multimedia exhibition and promotion of books, periodicals and publishing technologies and to facilitate St.
    [Show full text]
  • A Review of the Mermaid of Black Conch by Monique Roffey.Anthurium , 17(1): 7, 1–4
    Glassie, A 2021 Catch and Release: A Review of The Mermaid of Black Conch by Monique Roffey. Anthurium, 17(1): 7, 1–4. DOI: https://doi.org/10.33596/anth.448 REVIEW Catch and Release: A Review of the Mermaid of Black Conch by Monique Roffey Alison Glassie University of Virginia, US [email protected] Review of Monique Roffey,The Mermaid of Black Conch: A Love Story. Peepal Tree Press, 2020. 188 pages. Keywords: Monique Roffey; ocean; mermaids; queer; love story In Monique Roffey’s latest novel, the Costa Award-winning The Mermaid of Black Conch: A Love Story, a thousand-year old Taino mermaid named Aycayia resurfaces to indict the logics of possession and extraction that have shaped the Caribbean since colonial contact. Having swum afoul of a sportfishing derby off the rural island of Black Conch in 1976, Aycayia is hooked—quite literally—by “white men from Florida [who] came to fish for marlin and instead pulled a mermaid out of the sea” (7). The ensuing novel, which follows its eponymous mermaid’s rescue and slow, temporary transformation from “barnacled, seaweed-clotted mer- maid” to womanhood, explores Aycayia’s awakening sexuality and foregrounds the transgressive—perhaps even queer—nature of love itself (7). Subtitled “a love story”, The Mermaid of Black Conch is actually a story about love. This distinction is less semantic than it might initially seem. As the novel juxtaposes relation- ships founded upon power, possession and extraction with the genuine loves and frustrations—erotic and otherwise—of the characters who participate in Aycayia’s rescue and wonder aloud about the curse that binds her to the sea, it suggests, following Angelique Nixon and Antonio Benitez-Rojo, that in queerness of gender, sexuality, and literary form, one finds a Caribbeanness as fluid and expansive as the sea itself.1 The author of six novels, four of which are set in Trinidad and the Caribbean, Roffey is a Senior Lecturer on the MA/MFA in Creative Writing at Manchester Metropolitan University, and a tutor at the Norwich Writers Centre.
    [Show full text]
  • P E E P a L T R E E P R E
    P E E P A L T R E E P R E S S 2017 Welcome to our 2017 catalogue! Peepal Tree brings you the very best of international writing from the Caribbean, its diasporas and the UK. Founded in 1985, Peepal Tree has published over 370 books and has grown to become the world’s leading publisher of Caribbean and Black British Writing. Our goal is to publish books that make a difference, and though we always want to achieve the best possible sales, we’re most concerned with whether a book will still be alive and have value in the future. Visit us at www.peepaltreepress.com to discover more. Peepal Tree Press 17 Kings Avenue, Leeds LS6 1QS, United Kingdom +44 (0)1 1 3 2451703 contact @ peepaltreepress.com www.peepaltreepress.com Trade Distribution – see back cover Madwoman SHARA MCCALLUM “These wonderful poems open a world of sensation and memory. But it is a world revealed by language, never just controlled. The voice that guides the action here is openhearted and openminded—a lyric presence that never deserts the subject or the reader. Syntax, craft and cadence add to the gathering music from poem to poem with—to use a beautiful phrase from the book, ‘each note tethering sound to meaning.’” —Eavan Boland Sometimes haunting and elusive, but ultimately transformative, the poems in Shara McCallum’s latest collection Madwoman chart and intertwine three stages of a woman’s life from childhood to adulthood to motherhood. Rich with the 9781845233396 / 80 pages / £8.99 POETRY complexities that join these states of being, the poems wrestle with the idea of JANUARY 2017 being girl, woman and mother all at once.
    [Show full text]
  • The Diplomatic Courier Vol
    Diplomatic Courier Vol. 1 | Issue 2 | August 7, 2016 The Diplomatic Courier Vol. 1 | Issue 2 | August 7, 2016 [email protected] Plan of Action for People of African Descent launched by OAS and PAHO he Pan American Health Organ- ization (PAHO) announced on TJuly 28 in Washington that it has collaborated with the Organization of American States (OAS) to launch a new Plan of Action for the Americas, including the Caribbean, for Imple- mentation of the International Decade for People of African Descent. PAHO says the initiative seeks to strengthen public policies to protect the rights of this population in the re- gion, “and ensure their full and equal participation between now and 2025.” The initiative also aims to improve the health and well-being of the more than 150 million peo- racial groups due to the inequality, poverty, and social exclu- ple of African descent estimated to live in the Western Hemi- sion they endure, which are closely related to racism, xeno- sphere. phobia and intolerance,” PAHO said. “These populations have worse health outcomes than other Continued on Page 3 Centre established to study the Legacies of British Slave Ownership he Centre for the Study of the Legacies of British the fruits of slavery were transmitted to metropolitan Britain. Slave-ownership has been established at UCL with Those behind the centre believe that research and analy- Tthe generous support of the Hutchins Center at sis of this group are both key to understanding the extent Harvard. and limits of slavery's role in shaping British history and The Centre will build on two earlier projects based at leaving lasting legacies that reach into the present.
    [Show full text]
  • Recitals Book Parties General Sessions Book Fair Workshops
    A book fair for the entire family … RECITALS BOOK PARTIES GENERAL SESSIONS BOOK FAIR WORKSHOPS In tribute to Kamau Brathwaite (85th birthday celebration), and Sen. Edward Brooke (1919-2015) A book fair for the entire family … CONTENTS Purpose and Objectives 04 VISION | MISSION STATEMENT | OBJECTIVES Messages 05 SHUJAH REIPH | JACQUELINE SAMPLE DR. FRANCIO GUADELOUPE | HON. ALINE HANSON HON. MARCEL GUMBS Pre-Book Fair Activities 10 JUNE 2 - 3, 2015 Book Fair Program 11 JUNE 4 - 6, 2015 18 AUTHORS AND WORKSHOP PRESENTERS The 13th Annual St. Martin Book Fair Organized by Conscious Lyrics Foundation and House of Nehesi Publishers in collaboration with St. Maarten Tourist Bureau, University of St. Martin LCF Foundation, St. Martin Tourist Office, and sponsors SOS radio, BK Martin Book Fund, SXM Airport. WELCOME | 13TH ANNUAL ST.MARTIN BOOK FAIR Purpose and Objectives of the St. Martin Book Fair VISION OBJECTIVES To be the dynamic platform for books and infor- • To support the right of the people of St. Martin to mation on and about St. Martin; establishing an have full access to books, which are culturally and eventful meeting place for the national literature of materially relevant to their reading needs. St. Martin and the literary cultures of the Caribbean; • To support the right to freedom of expression networking with literary cultures from around the and the fullest possible exchange of ideas and world. information through books and other reading and knowledge-based materials. MISSION STATEMENT • To promote professional ethics and conduct and fair practice in St. Martin and Caribbean book and To develop a marketplace for the multifaceted related industries.
    [Show full text]
  • V6 BIM Chapman-Andrews.Pdf
    Cover Image RED COCONUT 2012 by Alison Chapman-Andrews 36" x 48" acrylic Private collection “Looking again at a drawing of Martin’s Bay a natural rectangle was clear, so it became a painting. I enjoyed doing it and it became the start of the series and exhibition of ‘Landscape Revisited’. The 3 primary colours in one piece is an idea I’ve been exploring since 2006. In this one red predominates in this work: ‘Red Coconut”. My favourite idea in Red Coconut is the green sun/coconut (green being the opposite colour of red). This has been photographed a number of times, but the colour is never quite right.” BIM: Arts for the 21st Century VOLUME 6 May 2013 – May 2014 Patron and Consultant Editor International Advisory Board George Lamming Heather Russell-Andrade, USA Kamau Brathwaite, Barbados/USA Editor Stewart Brown, U.K. Esther Phillips Colin Channer, Jamaica/USA Austin Clarke, Barbados/Canada Carolyn Cooper, Jamaica Associate Editor Kwame Dawes, Ghana/USA Anthony Bogues Margaret Gill, Barbados Lorna Goodison, Jamaica/Canada Lennox Honychurch, Dominica Managing Editor Anthony Kellman, Barbados/USA Gladstone Yearwood Elizabeth Nunez, Trinidad/USA Sandra Pouchet-Paquet, USA Editorial Board De Carla Applewhaite Printed by COT Holdings Limited Hilary Beckles Design by M. Yearwood Curwen Best Dana Gilkes BIM: Arts for the 21st Century Gale Hall Errol Barrow Centre for Mark McWatt Creative Imagination Esther Phillips The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill, P.O. Box 64, Board of Management Bridgetown BB11000, Barbados Hilary Beckles Telephone: (246) 417-4776 Janet Caroo Fax: (246) 417-8903 Gale Hall Celia Toppin Sheron Johnson Lisa Alleyne Gladstone Yearwood VOLUME 6 1 BIM: Arts for the 21st Century is edited collaboratively by persons drawn from the literary community, who represent the creative, academic and developmental interests critical for the sustainability of the best Caribbean literature.
    [Show full text]
  • BIM2020 V1001 06 Web.Pdf
    Volume BIM: Arts for the 21st Century the 21st BIM: Arts for Volume Volume Cover image courtesy of Judith Armitage – Watercolour 2021 Inspired by “Red Plums and Coffee” – Adrian Augier BIM: Arts for the 21st Century MAY 2021 VOLUME 10 Patron and Consultant Editor International Advisory Board George Lamming Heather Russell-Andrade, USA Edward Baugh, Jamaica Editor Hilary Beckles, Barbados/Jamaica Esther Phillips Stewart Brown, U.K. Loretta Collins-Klobah, Puerto Rico Kwame Dawes, Ghana/USA Associate Editor Keith Ellis, Canada Anthony Bogues Lorna Goodison, Jamaica/Canada Lennox Honychurch, Dominica Anthony Kellman, Barbados/USA Managing Editor John Robert Lee, St. Lucia C. M. Harclyde Walcott Mervyn Morris, Jamaica Elizabeth Nunez, Trinidad/USA Editorial Board Sandra Pouchet-Paquet, USA V. Eudine Barriteau Jeremy Poynting, U.K Curwen Best Annalee Davis BIMMAG.ORG designed by Lamair Nash Margaret Gill Printed by COT Holdings Limited Hazel Simmons-McDonald Layout for print by M. Yearwood Mark McWatt Esther Phillips BIM: Arts for the 21st Century C. M. Harclyde Walcott. Faculty of Culture, Creative and Performing Arts, Board of Management Errol Barrow Centre for Lisa Alleyne Creative Imagination V. Eudine Barriteau The University of the West Indies, Gale Hall Cave Hill, P.O. Box 64, Sheron Johnson Bridgetown BB11000, Barbados C. M. Harclyde Walcott Telephone: (246) 417-4776 Fax: (246) 417-8903 VOLUME 10 iii BIM: Arts for the 21st Century is edited collaboratively by persons drawn from the literary community, who represent the creative, academic and developmental interests critical for the sustainability of the best Caribbean literature. BIM: Arts for the 21st Century is jointly published by the Faculty of Culture, Creative and Performing Arts, Errol Barrow Centre for Creative Imagination, The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus, and the Prime Minister’s Office (Culture).
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Discovering West Indian Literature in English A
    1 DISCOVERING WEST INDIAN LITERATURE IN ENGLISH A SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY COMPILED AND SELECTED BY JOHN ROBERT LEE DEDICATED TO PATRICIA CHARLES, SAINT LUCIA 1937-2010 and REX NETTLEFORD, JAMAICA 1933-2010. ©PUBLISHED IN CASTRIES, 2010 2 DISCOVERING WEST INDIAN LITERATURE IN ENGLISH SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY Compiled and selected by John Robert Lee DEDICATED TO: PATRICIA CHARLES, SAINT LUCIA 1937-2010 : REX NETTLEFORD, JAMAICA 1933-2010. Contents: Introduction 1. West Indian Authors – Prose writers, mainly novelists, with selected works listed. 2. West Indian Authors – Poets, a Name Index. 3. Selected Anthologies of West Indian Literature. 4. West Indian Literary Journals. 5. Readings on West Indian Literature in English. 6. Readings on The Historical, Cultural and Social Background. Introduction This bibliography presents selected texts of Caribbean writing in English and of works on the background to the writing. Many of these represent the first writers and writings that identified and defined West Indian Literature. They are familiar names in the now established West Indian Canon. Many new writers 3 and distinctive works have emerged since the early days, a number of whose names and works are listed. This bibliography is aimed at those discovering the Literature and will help them to identify the major writers, the now-classic authors and talented new voices. The selected readings give a broad chronological background to the history of the literature, and its cultural and historical setting. The anthologies provide a perspective on the span of writers and their concerns. The range of anthologies – from the classic first compilations to the more recent –also offer a historical view of the development of the literature.
    [Show full text]
  • Sample Pages Have Been Taken from English B Syllabuses
    Sample Chapter A World of PoetryThird Edition Edited by Mark McWatt Hazel Simmons-McDonald POETRY_MARKETING_SC_COVER_V5.indd 1 30/05/2017 11:39 9781510414310 A World of Poetry £10.99 June 2017 Inspire students to enjoy poetry while helping them to prepare effectively for the CSEC® examination; ensure coverage of all prescribed poems for the revised CSEC® English A and English B syllabuses with an anthology that has been compiled with the approval of the Caribbean Examinations Council by Editors who have served as CSEC® English panel members. ● Stimulate an interest in and enjoyment of poetry with a wide range of themes and subjects, a balance of well-known poems from the past and more recent works, as well as poems from the Caribbean and the rest of the world. ● Support understanding with notes on each poem and questions to provoke discussion, and a useful checklist to help with poetry analysis. ● Consolidate learning with practical guidance on how to tackle examination questions including examples of model answers for reference. A World of Poetry is also available in Student eTextbook format via Dynamic Learning Student eTextbook 9781510411012 1 year: £7.33 2 years: £10.99 July 2017 Student eTextbooks are downloadable versions of the printed textbook that you can assign to students so they can: ● Download and view on any device or browser ● Add, edit and synchronise notes across 2 devices ● Access their personal copy on the move via the Dynamic Reader App Also available: A World of Prose A World of Prose 9781510414327 Student eTextbook
    [Show full text]