9789766401719-9766401713-From Nation to Diaspora: Samuel Selvon, George Lamming And the Cultural Performance of Gender

From Nation to Diaspora: Samuel Selvon, George Lamming And the Cultural Performance of Gender

ISBN-13: 9789766401719
ISBN-10: 9766401713
Edition: First Edition
Author: Curdella Forbes
Publication date: 2005
Publisher: University Press of the West Indies
Format: Paperback 316 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9789766401719
ISBN-10: 9766401713
Edition: First Edition
Author: Curdella Forbes
Publication date: 2005
Publisher: University Press of the West Indies
Format: Paperback 316 pages

Summary

From Nation to Diaspora: Samuel Selvon, George Lamming And the Cultural Performance of Gender (ISBN-13: 9789766401719 and ISBN-10: 9766401713), written by authors Curdella Forbes, was published by University Press of the West Indies in 2005. With an overall rating of 4.3 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent From Nation to Diaspora: Samuel Selvon, George Lamming And the Cultural Performance of Gender (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

This book is the first comprehensive treatment of gender in the works of Samuel Selvon and George Lamming, two important West Indian writers who are rarely analysed together. It demystifies nationalist discourses and discourses of creolization showing that these have masked gender inequalities and complexities in West Indian society, and that the maskings are in turn part of a larger masking of neocolonial threads within nationalism. Forbes situates the fictions of Selvon and Lamming within the wider field of West Indian social thought and practice, and she demonstrates that gender is foundational within West Indian revolutionary action - a fact consistently ignored in mainstream discourses, including feminist ones. These two West Indians' treatments of gender belong to a revolutionary poetics of liberation in West Indian culture but are deeply compromised by the nationalist engagements and the nationalist context of the 1950s-1970s. Lamming's treatment of it, anticipates and problematizes the concepts of postmodernity and postmodernism, which have entered West Indian discourse via postcolonial discourse and the work of migration on West Indian theory and criticism. The book concludes by looking towards these discourses that are now playing major roles in West Indian thought. Forbes links West Indian nationalism and the fictions of Selvon and Lamming into a dialogue with the concepts of diasproa, postmodernity and postmodernism, raising the issue of how the latter have impacted on the representation and formation of West Indian gender identities. She then considers the implications of these discourses for West Indian writing, West Indian theory and, above all, West Indian survival and identity in a postmodern, essentially neocolonized world.
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