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Keyword [Caribbean women]
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1. Why Is She So "angry" ?
2. Intergenerational memory in the work of Francophone Caribbean women writers
3. Making connections and associations: Caribbean women writers recreating subjectivities in New York City
4. 'Qui chile sa?': The representation of intergenerational relationships in Caribbean women's writing: Merle Collins, Lakshmi Persaud, Edwidge Danticat, and Paule Marshall
5. Contemporary African and Caribbean Women's Writing: National Consciousness and Identity
6. Women's lives and the challenges of feminism in Caribbean fiction: Maryse Conde, 'Moi, Tituba, Sorciere...Noire de Salem' (1986), Patrick Chamoiseau, 'Texaco' (1992), and Simone Schwarz-Bart, 'Pluie et Vent sur Telumee Miracle' (1972)
7. How the strong survive: Health as expanding consciousness and the life experiences of Black Caribbean women
8. Children for ransom: Reading ibeji as a catalyst for reconstructing motherhood in Caribbean women's writing
9. Ecowomanist endeavors: Race, gender, and environmental ethics in contemporary Caribbean women's literature
10. Between women: Desire in Caribbean literatures
11. French Caribbean Women's Theatre: Trauma, Slavery, and Transcultural Performance
12. Naturalizing identity, politicizing nature: Metaphors of identification in the writing of Caribbean women writers (Gisele Pineau, Maryse Conde, Guadeloupe, Erna Brodber, Jamaica, Marlene Nourbese Philip, Trinidad and Tobago)
13. Feminine postcoloniality and resistance: Asian American and Afro-Caribbean women's fiction
14. Skirting history: Decolonizing strategies in Caribbean women's literature
15. Negotiating identity in the waters of the Atlantic: The middle passage trope in African -American and Afro -Caribbean women's writing
16. Performing subversion: A comparative study of Caribbean women playwrights (Guadeloupe, Jamaica, Puerto Rico, Luisa Carpetillo, Una Marson, Maryse Conde)
17. 'All the trappings of racism are here, and I live in them': Resistance, counterspace, and identity socialization as Afro-Caribbean women raise second generation immigrant sons and grandsons in a racialized U.S. southeastern state
18. The daughter's return: Revisions of history in contemporary fiction by African-American and Caribbean women writers
19. Historical narratives in the Caribbean: Women giving voice to history
20. The narrative creation of self in the fiction by African-American and African-Caribbean women writers
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