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Feathers and Blooms—Frameworks for Fictionalizing the Life of an Artist: A Comparative Review of Carol Bruneau s Brighten the Corner Where You Are and Dede Crane s One Madder Woman – PRISM international

Feathers and Blooms—Frameworks for Fictionalizing the Life of an Artist: A Comparative Review of Carol Bruneau s Brighten the Corner Where You Are and Dede Crane s One Madder Woman – PRISM international
prismmagazine.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from prismmagazine.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Library book club to discuss A Million Aunties

Bookminders, the Hermiston Public Library s book club, meets at 1:30 p.m. on the second Tuesday of each month. The meeting will be downstairs in the library meeting room, 235 E.

New Issue: JWIL (28: 2)

This latest issue of the Journal of West Indian Literature ( JWIL, Vol. 28 No. 2) is an open issue edited by Glyne Griffith. [Cover art features Mark Jason Weston’s “Keeping It Close” (9 x 12 inches, paper collage and watercolor pencil on watercolor paper, 2020).] Description: The issue features articles by established scholars in the field alongside work by advanced doctoral candidates, part of the newer cohort of Caribbeanist scholars. Although the selected essays are not formally organized around an overarching theme, a certain thematic tendency is nevertheless discernible as one peruses the contributions. Several of the essays draw upon the philosophical model of the rhizome, a structuring concept associated with the thought of Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, as well as that of Édouard Glissant and Paul Gilroy. Additionally, some of the essays engage Glissant’s concept of relation to advance their analyses of Caribbean literary practice. Also evident in a numbe

Caribbean Readers Awards announces shortlist

Book lovers have spoken and the nominations are in for the inaugural Caribbean Readers’ Awards, hosted by Rebel Women Lit. Launched on December 1, 2020, phase one of the awards saw readers putting forward their favourite Caribbean books published between November 2019 and November 2020. Now, with the shortlists revealed, the voting phase of the awards has commenced and everyone is encouraged to vote for their top picks in each category. Voting ends on December 31, 2020, and the winners will be announced at the online awards ceremony on January 3, 2021. “It’s been so heartening to see the response to the awards so far. So many good books were nominated - some that got a lot of support and publicity from the bookish community and traditional media, as well as some that hadn’t, so this also provides a great opportunity for readers to discover some hidden treasures. The reception to the awards so far has been fantastic as well, and the number of nominations, along with the earl

In Jamaica, Rebel Women Lit Launches the Caribbean Readers Awards

In Jamaica, Rebel Women Lit Launches the Caribbean Readers’ Awards Book club and literary community Rebel Women Lit aims to ‘showcase the amazing range’ of Caribbean literature with the newly launched Caribbean Readers’ Awards. Shortlisted titles for the 2020 edition of the newly launched Caribbean Readers’ Awards. Image: Rebel Women Lit By Hannah Johnson | @hannahsjohnson ‘2020 Was a Big Year for Caribbean Authors’ Voting is now open for the debut cycle of the Caribbean Readers’ Awards, a new initiative from the Jamaica-based book club and literary community Rebel Women Lit, founded in 2017 by Jherane Patmore. “Caribbean literature is so much more diverse than our scholastic reading lists would suggest,” says Patmore in a prepared statement on the launch of the awards. “Rebel Women Lit decided to create these awards so that we can showcase the amazing range that Caribbean lit has to offer.”

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