Research and Markets, the largest resource for market research information in world providing essential market research reports, industry research, industry analysis, forecasts, market studies, company profiles and country reports.
Welcome - Register - Login - Help/FAQ - 0 items View Basket
Worlds Largest Market Research Resource - 1516341 Live Reports
Search Research and Markets
  Search
Enter keywords, a title or
a report id number below.





Advanced   
Company search
Register for free email updates of market research
Currency
  Select a currency for use throughout the site



Viewing report

Order by Fax
Ask a Question
Printer Friendly
PDF Brochure
Hard CopyAdd to Basket
Live Chat Live Help Software for Website

Omeros and Beloved through Wilson Harris’s Cross-Cultural Imagination. Edition No. 1

VDM Publishing House, May 2010, Pages: 292


  Description  
   Authors   
    
    
    
     
  Enquire before Buying   
  Send to a Friend   

This text offers a contribution to the large body of work that is dedicated to unraveling the significant ideas of the Caribbean thinker, Wilson Harris. This study applies his notion of a cross-cultural imagination to a comparative discussion of the literary treatment of the trauma of New World colonialism and slavery in Derek Walcott’s Omeros and Toni Morrison’s Beloved. Concerned with the themes and tropes of loss and ‘re-memberment’, these narratives highlight Harris’s focus on the ‘flexible arcs and patterns of community’ that are possible within a cross-cultural awareness of human society’s involvement with ‘legacies of conquest’. This reading uses the work of a Caribbean critical lens, with its acknowledgment of the heterogeneity of the Americas, to emphasize a redemptive poetics for the re-visioning of the ‘postcolonial’ condition. The dialogue across Harris’s, Morrison’s and Walcott’s work presents an alternative critical praxis for those interested in the development of Caribbean literary theory and of Caribbean and African- American literature in diaspora.



For enquiries please call us on:
  +353-1-415-1241 (GMT Office Hours)
  1-917-300-0470 (EST Office Hours)

   All rights reserved. © Copyright 2012 Research and Markets
   Terms and conditions Privacy Policy Publishers Employment Opportunities Site Map Link to us Webmaster Affiliate Network


Research and Markets RSS Feeds