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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Sycorax the muse  





2 See also  





3 References  





4 External links  





5 Further reading  














Barabajan Poems







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Barabajan Poems
AuthorKamau Brathwaite
SubjectBarbadian poetry History and criticism, Postcolonialism
GenreCriticism, interpretation, etc
Set inThe Caribbean
Published1994
PublisherSavacou Publications
Publication placeJamaica and United States
Media typePrint
Pages380+
ISBN9780964042438
OCLC31099127

Barabajan Poems, 1492–1992 is a collection of various types of writing, authored by the Barbados postcolonial author Kamau Brathwaite and published by Savacou Publications in 1994.[1][2]

In this collection, readers experience a number of Brathwaite's overwhelming ordeals in his recent life, shared honestly and sincerely.[3] It is not only autobiographical but also represents a community defined by a Caribbean culture in transition from colonialism to a modernized independent economic state within the "new world order".[3] It is fictionally and spiritually a magic book, serving as a counterweight to Prospero's books of magic in Shakespeare's playThe Tempest, and is a foil for the bygone landlords Christopher Columbus (1992 was the Columbus Quincentenary) and the fictional Prospero.

Sycorax the muse[edit]

In an attempt to give voice to unspoken indigenous cultures, Brathwaite's postcolonial poems outline the history of the Caribbean through Sycorax's eyes. Sycorax is presented as Brathwaite's muse, possessing him and his computer to give full voice to the history of the silenced, who in Brathwaite's philosophy are not only Caribbean natives, but any culture under-represented during the colonial period.[3]

According to Brathwaite, "[W]hat happened to CalibaninThe Tempest was that his alliances were laughable, his alliances were fatal, his alliances were ridiculous. He chose the wrong people to make God." Brathwaite "considered Sycorax, Caliban's mother, 'a paradigm for all women of the Third World, who have not yet, despite all the effort, reached that trigger of visibility which is necessary for a whole society.'" [4]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Reckin, Ann (December 2003). "Kamau Brathwaite's Prose [and] Poetry as Sound-Space". Anthurium: A Caribbean Studies Journal. 1 (1). University of Miami: Article 5. doi:10.33596/anth.4. Retrieved 15 February 2020. 17 pages. Free PDF download.
  • ^ Otto, Melanie. "Edward Brathwaite: Barabajan Poems". The Literary Encyclopedia. Volume 4:. 22 May 2012. Anglophone Writing and Culture of Central America and the Caribbean.
  • ^ a b c Savory, Elaine. Wordsongs & Wordwounds / "Homecoming: Kamau Brathwaite's Barabajan Poems". World Literature Today. 68.4, Autumn 1994, pp. 750–57. JSTOR 40150620.
  • ^ Gowda, H. H. Anniah. "Creation in the Poetic Development of Kamau Brathwaite". Poetry Criticism, edited by Janet Witalec, vol. 56, Gale, 2004. Gale Literature Resource Center. Retrieved 6 February 2020. Originally published in World Literature Today, vol. 68, no. 4, Autumn 1994, pp. 691–696.
  • External links[edit]

    Further reading[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Barabajan_Poems&oldid=1199046948"

    Categories: 
    1994 poetry books
    African diaspora literature
    Caribbean literature
    North American literature
    South American literature
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