Wednesday, November 26, 2008

New Day

New Day
Reid, Victor Stafford
Melbourne : W. Heinemann, 1950
344 p. ; 19 cm




A historical novel about a Jamaican man who witnessed the rebellion of 1865 and narrates the story in his own words. The cover, a line drawing of a colonial street,picks up on the historic theme. Reid, like many Caribbean novelists, saw the novel especially, but not exclusively, as a means of recapturing a lost history through imaginative forms. He was especially interested in doing so in his young people's literature.

H.D. Carberry Collection of Caribbean Studies
University of Illinois at Chicago Library
Daley Library - Special Collections/3rd floor (non-circ.)
PR9265.9.R4 N49 1950

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Pieces of Paradise

Pieces of Paradise
Helweg-Larsen, Kjeld
London ; New York : Jarrolds, 1967
184 p. ; ill. (col. front), maps ; 24 cm




The cover photograph evokes one familiar image of the exotic, the edenic, long associated with representations of the Caribbean in the British book trade. This cover also invites the tourist, at a time when the British tourist industry was growing. Such images of the "paradise" of the Caribbean or the "tropics" in general appear in Victorian literature and travel writing, a period that marks the beginning of tourism as an industry. The photographs of visiting British royalty on the back cover mark this association even more strongly.

H.D. Carberry Collection of Caribbean Studies
University of Illinois at Chicago Library
Daley Library - Special Collections/3rd floor (non-circ.)
F1612 .H37

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The Dragon Can't Dance

The Dragon Can't Dance
Lovelace, Earl
London : A. Deutsch, 1979
240 p. ; 21 cm




Trinidad is Earl Lovelace's consistent subject. Dragon Can't Dance focuses on that ritual that is quintessentially Trinidadian, carnival, and the transformative magic it performs on the lives of all Trinidadians, but especially those who are most marginalized. Set in the slums of Port of Spain, the characters of this novel represent the poor from both populations that comprise, almost in equal numbers, modern Trinidad: African and South Asian. The tensions within and between these two groups are dramatically, and often comically, represented in the novel. These are complex and ever present tensions that derive not only from cultural and racial differences, but also from historical issues such as primacy, stemming from the historic order in which these populations were forcibly brought to the island, and their often diverse development. Although the African populations were brought to the island through the slave trade, which ended in 1807, and the South Asian population was brought as indentured labor in 1838, when the black slaves were fully emancipated, to replace slave labor in the then largely plantation economy, the South Asian population, by the 20th century, much surpassed the black at least economically. This is a subject Lovelace often deals with in his novels, treating the fierce rivalries between the two groups with irony and compassionate laughter. The question of history arises here both in the depiction of these two groups in this novel and the ritual stability carnival can bring at least momentarily. In this respect, the novel also picks up on the sense of exile that marks Caribbean writing in general, since all populations in the region came from elsewhere. The uniqueness of the Caribbean in the postcolonial world derives much from this aspect, that almost no indigenous population exists, and consequently is the subject of study as an example of both the African and the Asian diasporas. But if the Caribbean is a place of exiles, it became, in the latter half of the twentieth century, a place from which people went into exile, usually to Britain. The causes of this recent Caribbean diaspora - economic and social instability as a result of colonial underdevelopment - is clearly represented in this novel.

H.D. Carberry Collection of Caribbean Studies
University of Illinois at Chicago Library
Daley Library - Special Collections/3rd floor (non-circ.)
PR9272.9.L6 D72 1979

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Anansi and the Alligator Eggs

Anansi and the Alligator Eggs (Anansi y los huevos del cocodrilo)
Sherlock, Philip Manderson, Sir
Jamaica : Operation Friendship , c1975
[32] p. : col. ill. ; 22 x 28 cm




A retelling of some of the Anansi stories. Sir Philip Sherlock’s interest in Jamaican folklore and history especially lead to many retellings of traditional tales; the majority of his work is in the Carberry Collection. The re-telling of this particular tale is bi-lingual, Spanish and English. The publication of this beautiful book, produced in Kingston, was underwritten by a volunteer society.

H.D. Carberry Collection of Caribbean Studies
University of Illinois at Chicago Library
Daley Library - Special Collections/3rd floor (non-circ.)
PZ8.1.S54 Am 1975

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Tuesday, November 25, 2008

The Independence Anthology of Jamaican Literature

The Independence Anthology of Jamaican Literature
[Kingston] Jamaica : Arts Celebration Committee of the Ministry of Development and Welfare, 1962
227 p. ; 22 cm




One of the few books in the Collection published in the Caribbean, this anthology, produced by the Institute of Jamaica under the general editorship of A.L. Hendriks, celebrates Jamaican independence. The official seal on the back cover and the celebrating figure executed in a generalized Africanist style on the front provide rich contrasts of design and meaning.

H.D. Carberry Collection of Caribbean Studies
University of Illinois at Chicago Library
Daley Library - Special Collections/3rd floor (non-circ.)
PR9265.I62 H46 1962

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The Wounded and the Worried

The Wounded and the Worried
Mittelholzer, Edgar
London : Putnam, [1962]
223 p. ; 21 cm




A vintage Mittelholzer of this period, the novel focuses on a gathering of people who have attempted suicide as they discuss with each other possible solutions to their problems, such as, for one character “clean sex” or, for another, some supernatural community. The novel asks whether love and the spiritual can defeat death; certainly a dark novel with respect to Mittelholzer’s eventual suicide.

H.D. Carberry Collection of Caribbean Studies
University of Illinois at Chicago Library
Daley Library - Special Collections/3rd floor (non-circ.)
PR9320.9.M5 W67 1962

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Thunder Returning

Thunder Returning
Mittelholzer, Edgar
London : Secker & Warburg, 1961
240 p. ; 21 cm




Second in the trilogy, Latticed Echoes, Thunder Returning represents Mittelholzer’s continuing interest in experimentation. In his foreword, he expresses hope “…that readers would be familiar with the leitmotiv as used in Wagner’s operas, especially The Ring…” but differentiates his use of the device from Wagner’s. (The leitmotiv in Wagner’s music is a recurrent, signature musical figure that is associated with various characters and situations.) Mittelholzer argues here that his use of the device is as a “symbol adjunct”, which is not part of the narrative. The plot concerns two women pregnant by the husband of one of them.

This copy is inscribed in ink, HD Carberry.

H.D. Carberry Collection of Caribbean Studies
University of Illinois at Chicago Library
Daley Library - Special Collections/3rd floor (non-circ.)
PR9320.9.M5 T48 1961

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Wide Sargasso Sea

Wide Sargasso Sea
Rhys, Jean
London : Deutsch, 1966
189 p. ; 21 cm




The famous response novel to Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre (1847), long considered a classic of Victorian fiction, or in more recent critical terms, a canonical work. The idea of the response novel, that it is a test and a correction of established representations, renders the latter term more timely. Wide Sargasso Sea is seminal in the creation of this mode in postcolonial fiction, which provides the other side of the story, an alternative narrative, from the point of view of a key character but one marginalized in the original text. In this case, that character is the first wife of the wealthy male hero and eventual husband of Jane, who appears in Jane Eyre as the (much written about) mad woman in the attic. A white Creole, child of the plantocracy, Antoinette is from an unnamed island in the Caribbean that bears remarkable resemblance to Dominica, Rhys’ native island. Thirty years in gestation, this novel can be seen as summative in Rhys’ work, both formally in its clean elegance and thematically in which the harshness of English character is matched by the violence of Caribbean society in the aftermath of slavery. Unrelenting and unredemptive, this is Rhys’ only novel set in the Caribbean, and one of two in which the protagonist is Caribbean. Her unfinished autobiography, Smile Please, which provides her only account of her childhood in the Caribbean, is an informative companion piece to this novel, especially in its painful and unreflective portrait of racial enmities in her childhood.

A note about the response novel: Wide Sargasso Sea provides something of a paradigm of the response novel on the grounds of its timeliness, its celebrated critical reception and enduring presence. In presenting an alternative narrative to an established work, the response novel lays bare the moral, ethical and political structures that underpin all narrative form. Specific to the postcolonial text, such alternative narratives are from the point of view of the colonized. Here, in Wide Sargasso Sea, what is laid bare is the wealth gained through slavery, the exploitation of colonial women and the legacy of racial hatreds in the Caribbean. The response novel, however, is not widely used because of its strictly literary nature, but the idea of the alternative narrative generally is widespread, in history especially (the New Historicism, for example), memoir and autobiography, to cite other important forms, and is a defining characteristic of the postcolonial text. For other response novels, note the Australian novelist Peter Carey’s Jack Maggs, a response to Dickens’ Great Expectations, the Sudanese novelist, Tayeb Salih, A Season of Migration to the North, a response to Othello, as is the novel The Nature of Blood by Caryl Phillips (St.Kitts/ Britain).

This copy is inscribed in red marker: To old uncle D: Happy Christmas late. JR 1967.

Wide Sargasso Sea was filmed in 1992.

H.D. Carberry Collection of Caribbean Studies
University of Illinois at Chicago Library
Daley Library - Special Collections/3rd floor (non-circ.)
PR9275.D653 R593 1966

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Good Morning, Midnight

Good Morning, Midnight
Rhys, Jean
London : Deutsch, 1967
189 p. ; 21 cm




The last (1939) of the early group of four novels, Good Morning, Midnight, is the most formally complex: first person narrative in the present tense, modified use of stream of consciousness, sharp structural shifts. The female protagonist, Sasha Jansen, is the familiar socially marginal lone female of the earlier novels, whose existence is almost as precarious as those of the earlier protagonists, but she is older, more experienced and far less naïve. Her return to Paris after a near breakdown in London marks the evolution of Sasha as a woman capable of love. The ending of the novel, “yes – yes – yes…”, so reminiscent of the ending of Joyce’s Ulysses, however positive, cannot gainsay Sasha’s grim journey through those meanest of Parisian streets and deepest of alcoholic depths. These four early novels establish Rhys as a great artist of modern urban anomie, of the savagery and exploitation of the modern city, most especially as it renders lone women isolate and vulnerable.

H.D. Carberry Collection of Caribbean Studies
University of Illinois at Chicago Library
Daley Library - Special Collections/3rd floor (non-circ.)
PR9275.D653 R59 1967

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A Tale of Three Places

A Tale of Three Places
Mittelholzer, Edgar
London : Seckner and Warburg, 1957
347 p. ; 20 cm




A Tale of Three Places is something of a rake’s progress, moving from London to Trinidad to St. Lucia that ends sentimentally with the return of the rake to his original woman, despite the fact that she is pregnant with someone else’s child. Despite the lighthearted title and the comedic possibilities of the plot, Mittelholzer explores with often excellent effect the darker aspects of human emotions, sex and love as well as racism and post Holocaust anti-Semitism, and does so through some of his best dialogue. The novel also explores the racial and social genealogical interconnections in the Caribbean, picking up this theme that informs the Kaywana trilogy, his work on the founding of Guyana. This novel, like the earlier trilogy, provides a provocative if particular version of the defiant pride and deep anxiety of being Creole, especially white Creole. On one level, the plot of this novel asks the question of origin as well as parenthood, certainly one of the larger historical questions of the region.

H.D. Carberry Collection of Caribbean Studies
University of Illinois at Chicago Library
Daley Library - Special Collections/3rd floor (non-circ.)
PR9320.9.M5 T35 1957

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Kaywana Blood

Kaywana Blood
Mittelholzer, Edgar
London, Secker & Warburg, 1958
523 p. illus. 21 cm




This is the final volume of the Kaywana trilogy, which starts in 1795 and ends in 1953 with independence movement. It records the end of the Groenwegel clan and, symbolically, the end of the Guyanese plantocracy. Given Mittelholzer’s great admiration for the composer Richard Wagner, this final volume evokes the feeling of the end of Wagner’s music drama cycle, the Ring; the final part is entitled The Twilight of the Gods. Wagner’s gods, like Mittelholzer’s Groenwegels, were only occasionally admirable. The main character of this third and last volume, Dirk, has clear vision of the vast changes of the twentieth century, especially the importance of competitive markets; on the other hand , he is defeated in a series of ironic twists by his own powerful dynastic loyalties deeply tied to notions of purity of race. Despite the fact that his closest friend (and half brother) and the woman he loves are mixed race, he denies them a full place in his home and his life. The novel records the triumph of the children of these characters and the rise of Creole Guiana in the twentieth century. Although Dirk realizes the narrowness of his vision at the end, the unlaid specter of race continues to haunt the characters even as independence becomes a possibility. This is another Mittelholzer novel of borders or thresholds: race (of course), sexuality, the bush and the cultivated, settler/ colonial, slave, indigene and metropolitan, sanity and madness. Formally elegant, a heavily unmediated use of soft Creole for dialogue throughout; as is typical in the Guyanese novels, Kaywana Blood uses extensive natural descriptions as clues to meaning. It ends with abrupt irony (about race) and a lack of resolution, which renders a sense of continuation, of the irresolvable elements, in this case, of race and colonialism.

H.D. Carberry Collection of Caribbean Studies
University of Illinois at Chicago Library
Daley Library - Special Collections/3rd floor (non-circ.)
PR9320.9.M5 K33 1958

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Monday, November 24, 2008

The Final Passage

The Final Passage
Phillips, Caryl
London ; Boston : Faber and Faber, 1985
205 p. ; 20 cm




Thought to be the first novel of Phillips’ generation dealing with the emigration from the Caribbean in the fifties, The Final Passage serves as an interesting companion piece to the now classic work of so many of the boom generation writers about the emigration: especially George Lamming (The Emigrants, 1954) and Samuel Selvon (The Lonely Londoners, 1956). Phillips’ look back over thirty years yields an even bleaker picture of the fate of the Caribbean emigrants in England as represented by the character of the protagonist, Leila, whose immaturity and naivety compound the ill effects of poverty, racism and isolation leading to the complete dissolution of her life in the coldest season of the year, Christmastime in England. Phillips’ first novel (and the only one in the Carberry Collection), The Final Passage immediately establishes his unique novelistic voice: the spare, elegant prose and the use of shifting structural devices that set up temporal disjunctures and colliding encounters.

H.D. Carberry Collection of Caribbean Studies
University of Illinois at Chicago Library
Daley Library - Special Collections/3rd floor (non-circ.)
PR9275.S263 P473 1985

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The Jilkington Drama

The Jilkington Drama
Mittelholzer, Edgar
London, New York, Abelard-Schuman [c1965]
190 p. 23 cm




Menage à quatre: Katherine and German raised, profoundly Catholic daughter, Lili; Harry Jilkington, desperate for a divorce from absent wife so he can marry Katherine and widowed son, Garvin, obsessed with the memory of dead wife, and father of pre-pubescent Mary. Garvin pursues Lili in half hearted fashion. Plot superficially looks like La Ronde (i.e., Katherine makes love to Garvin, to “save” him; Harry and Lili, for a similar reason). As in all his novels, violence plays under the surface of events in the form of memories of the Second World War (Harry), Nazism (Katherine and Lili) and insanity (Garvin’s eccentricities evolve into suicidal madness in the final, bizarre effort to immolate himself with thousands of firecrackers). No resolution except the recitation of the date and time of Garvin’s death from severe burns. Unlike Dirk in KB, nobody seems wiser at the end of this; the abrupt ending signifies no purpose in returning to surviving characters. Again, heavy dialogue; stripped narrative, less natural description than in Guyana work.

H.D. Carberry Collection of Caribbean Studies
University of Illinois at Chicago Library
Daley Library - Special Collections/3rd floor (non-circ.)
PR9320.9.M5 J55 1965

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Children of Kaywana (1st Ace edition)

Children of Kaywana
Mittelholzer, Edgar
London : Ace, 1959
379 p. ; 18 cm




Part One of Mittelholzer’s trilogy of the founding of Guyana begins with the seduction of a Dutch sailor by the eponymous founding mother, Kaywana, a mixed race Amerindian, in a flawed tropical Eden “the air stood still…like a humid cobweb…” in the year 1612. This volume spans a century and a half and ends with the slave uprisings of 1763. Epic in its size and reach, the trilogy is myth and history of the evolving nationhood of Guyana as lived by the family founded in the marriage of Kaywana with the first van Groenwegel. Passed down through a succession of male descendants, the Dutch name holds, but the family undergoes and often resists a process of racial and cultural creolization that is quintessentially Caribbean. Nationhood is represented in this creolization process as well as throughout the trilogy in the struggles of this family to maintain power in a complex but consistently hostile environment. Their lives are threatened by external forces – natural, political and social – as well as the profound psychological imbalances engendered by their efforts to prevail and even survive. Part One focuses on Kaywana’s mixed race granddaughter, Hendrickje, whose life spans almost a century and who is killed in the uprising while defending the plantation, rifle in hand. Hendrickje is both monstrous in her obsessive drive to strengthen the family and occasionally almost admirable in her refusal to be defeated by anything. Fueled by powerful sexual energy, she dominates and destroys almost all the men in her orbit. If misogynist, the portrait of Hendrickje is created through Mittelhölzer’s icy, affectless prose as an inevitable deformation of humanity by the brutality of the colonizing process. Mittelholzer’s admiration for the composer Richard Wagner and the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche is apparent in the compelling and repellent character of Hendrickje who so embodies the idea of the will to power.

H.D. Carberry Collection of Caribbean Studies
University of Illinois at Chicago Library
Daley Library - Special Collections/3rd floor (non-circ.)
PR9320.9.M5 C49 1959

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Friday, November 21, 2008

Voyage in the Dark

Voyage in the Dark
London : A. Deutsch, 1967
188 p. ; 21 cm.




According to Rhys’s own account in her autobiographical work, Smile Please, (see note below), the earliest version of this novel was written years before her first published work, a collection of short stories, The Left Bank, in 1927, but was not re-written and published until the mid-thirties after Quartet (1928) and Leaving Mr. Mackenzie (1930). The protagonist, Anna Morgan, is the only one in the group of four novels in the decade between 1929 and 1938 who is a colonial from the Caribbean and whose colonial status, which earns her the contempt of other characters, contributes to her vulnerability as a young woman without resources adrift in London. Although Rhys would not return to the issue of the colonial until her novel of 30 years later, Wide Sargasso Sea (1966), some of the recognizably autobiographical elements of her fiction are already apparent in Voyage in the Dark: the dubious independence of urban life for women without money or connections, vulnerable to sexual predators and the oblivion of alcohol. A first person narrative, the novel spirals downward toward its inevitable ending in abortion and abandonment.

H.D. Carberry Collection of Caribbean Studies
University of Illinois at Chicago Library
Daley Library - Special Collections/3rd floor (non-circ.)
PR9275.D653 R5929 1967

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The Pleasures of Exile

The Pleasures of Exile [1st ed.]
Lamming, George
London : M. Joseph, 1960
232 p. ; 22 cm




A collection of essays both personal narrative and theory, The Pleasures of Exile remains seminal in the formation of an aesthetic and a politics in the Eastern Caribbean. The use of personal narrative as an organic element of theory is idiosyncratically and quintessentially Caribbean and would inflect much of future postmodern theory. Lamming’s reading of The Tempest here extends that of CLR James in The Black Jacobins (1938) as he explores and develops a particular concept of hybridity in the Caliban/Prospero figures as representing an organically conjoined consciousness for the Caribbean. The Caliban figure is a profoundly shaping influence in the identity formation not only for theorists writing in English but for those of the Spanish Caribbean (Marti; Rettamar – Cuba) and the French (Cesaire – Martinque). Lamming preserves a nearly conversational, occasionally polemical tone throughout the essays.

H.D. Carberry Collection of Caribbean Studies
University of Illinois at Chicago Library
Daley Library - Special Collections/3rd floor (non-circ.)
PR9230.9.L25 P54 1960

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The Games Were Coming

The Games Were Coming
Anthony, Michael
London : Deutsch, 1963
223 p. ; 19 cm




Anthony’s first novel, The Games Were Coming, is set in Trinidad (San Fernando) during the time of the Southern Games. The novel follows the uncertain course of the yet unconsummated love affair of the two young protagonists, Leon and Sylvia. Leon’s fixation with winning the bicycle race and the intense training he endures under his father’s tutelage leaves Sylvia lonely and feeling unloved. Momentarily beguiled by her married Indian employer’s amorous advances, Sylvia becomes pregnant. Her hope is that Leon’s offer to marry her if he wins the race is serious and that he will accept the child as his. Narrated in a simple, realist, concrete style, the novel renders the sense of immediacy that governs the characters’ lives and the contingencies that they cannot control. This first novel marks the direction Anthony’s fiction would take in its representation of the lives of ordinary Trinidadians, in their language and their behavior.

H.D. Carberry Collection of Caribbean Studies
University of Illinois at Chicago Library
Daley Library - Special Collections/3rd floor (non-circ.)
PR9272.9.A5 G3 1963

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Wednesday, November 19, 2008

All That Glitters

All That Glitters
Anthony, Michael
London : Andre Deutsch, 1981
202 p. ; 21 cm




A first person novel told by a thirteen year-old boy, the narrative follows Horace’s discovery of the destructive forces of greed through the theft of a gold necklace. The arrival of an aunt whose employment in Panama has earned her considerable wealth has caused a stir in the small fishing village where Horace lives with his family. The necklace is stolen from his home, and helping to track down the culprit becomes an important lesson in human behavior for him. Among Anthony’s later work, this novel maintains a familiar consistent focus on the solidity of the community and the family, even as non-traditional. A character who returns – here to Trinidad – from Panama with a considerable amount of money given the local economy occurs occasionally in the mid-century novels. See notably the Haitian novelist, Jacques Roumains, Gouverneurs de la rosée, (translated by Langston Hughes as Masters of the Dew).

H.D. Carberry Collection of Caribbean Studies
University of Illinois at Chicago Library
Daley Library - Special Collections/3rd floor (non-circ.)
PR9272.9.A5 A4 1981

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