Contributor
Bloom, Harold.
Imprint:Philadelphia : Chelsea House, c1998.
Descriptionvii, 186 p. ; 25 cm.
Note:Jamaica Kincaid and the resistance to canons / Giovanna Covi. - Family connections: mother and mother country in the fiction of Jean Rhys and Jamaica Kincaid / Laura Niesen de Abruna. - She ties her tongue: the problems of cultural paralysis in postcolonial criticism / Alison Donnell. - Lucy and the mark of the colonizer / Moira Ferguson. - Jamaica Kincaid: "first they must be children" / Patricia Ismond. - Compared to what? Global feminism, comparatism, and the master's tools. - Serving the (m)other connefction: the representation of cultural identity in Jamaica Kincaid's Annie John / H. Adlai Murdoch. - Jamaica Kincaid's Lucy: cultural "translation" as a case of creative exploration of the past / Edyta Oczkowicz. - Initiation in Jamaica Kincaid's Annie John / Donna Perry. - Cold hearts and (foreign) tongues: recitation and the reclamation of the female body in the works of Erna Brodber and Jamaica Kincaid / Helen Tiffin. - Adolescent rebellion and gender relations in At the Bottom of the River and Annie John / Helen Pyne Timothy.
Bibliography Note:Includes bibliographical references (p. 177) and index.