Here Comes the Sun: Deconstructed Student EssaysMain MenuAFR 283: Islands, Archipelagoes and Black Women's Literature“The islands provide me, from a technical point of view, a microcosm in which can be seen in sharp relief many of the basic problems and conflicts which beset oppressed peoples everywhere.” -Paule Marshall, “Shaping the World of My Art”Critical VocabularyLanding page for Critical Vocab TermsUnessaysThis is the launchpad for deconstructed essaysRandi Gill-Sadler4a914792fbfb2078ef84e08319c412098bd9b469
Demonic Ground by Katherine McKittrick
1media/mini_thumb.jpg2024-04-23T16:14:34+00:00Randi Gill-Sadler4a914792fbfb2078ef84e08319c412098bd9b46911Foundational Text for the Courseplain2024-04-23T16:14:34+00:00Randi Gill-Sadler4a914792fbfb2078ef84e08319c412098bd9b469
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1media/maliche.jpgmedia/sunrise.webp2024-04-11T15:56:55+00:00Kasha's Unessay15The tropes and figures that disrupt colonial histories and geographies.image_header2024-04-23T18:34:58+00:00
What are three ways that Dennis-Benn treats Jamaica specifically, and island and geographies generally, that counter colonial renderings of island geographies?
How is Dennis-Benn in conversation with other Black women writers in her representation of Jamaica specifically, and island geographies broadly?