Autumn 2015 Special Author(s):

Jean Rhys and Jamaica Kincaid & the Postcolonial Caribbean

Course Tutor: Denise deCaires Narain; Office: B268

e-mail:

Jean Rhys and Jamaica Kincaid are two of the most prominent women writers from the Caribbean. Their work has generated a great deal of critical attention as well as debate about how their texts might be placed in relation to existing literary categories including the Caribbean, feminist, postcolonial, and modernist. This course introduces you to their most significant publications in relation to key critical discussions about: ‘race’, nation, ‘voice’, gender, sexuality, landscape, the autobiographical, migration & diaspora, and questions of ‘literary and cultural belonging’.

The primary reading is listed below and a full course outline will be put on SyD before week 1 of term.

Please read as many of the primary texts as you can before term starts – you will need to purchase these as the library holds very limited numbers (they have a policy of 1 book for every 8 students on a course) and some of the texts by Kincaid are difficult to get hold of in the UK.

Writing and Reading Exercise for Week 1:“One is not born a woman a woman, one becomes one” I’d like you to think about de Beauvoir’s famous formulation about the way gender is culturally produced in relation to Wide Sargasso Sea(1966) by Jean RhysAnnie John(1983) by Jamaica Kincaid. What are the specific cultural constraints on ‘girlhood’ that the two texts identify? What possibilities are presented for evading patriarchal constructions of gender roles? Consider how the aesthetic/formal qualities are crucial to each writer’s arguments about becoming a woman/lady/slut.

Dip into any of the many books and articles that focus on Jean Rhys or Jamaica Kincaid and start compiling a chronology of aspects of their lives and texts that strike you as interesting or relevant to you r reading of the two novels – noting any similarities and differences between them. Please come to the first class with at least 800 words of notes in response to your reading.

Primary Texts

(** indicates texts which can be ‘dipped into’)

Jean Rhys

Short storycollection: Tigers are Better-Looking**

Novels:

After Leaving Mr McKenzie

Voyage in the Dark

Good Morning, Midnight

Wide Sargasso Sea

Non-fiction:

Smile Please: An Unfinished Autobiography**

The Letters of Jean Rhys (eds Francis Wyndham and Diana Melly)**

Jamaica Kincaid

Short story collection: At The Bottom of the River**

Novels:

Annie John

Lucy

Autobiography of My Mother

Mr Potter

See Now Then

Non-fiction:

My Brother**

A Small Place

My Garden (Book) **

Selection of Secondary Reading:

There is a great deal of material on Rhys and Kincaid; the list below is indicative rather than exhaustive)

Veronica Marie Gregg, Jean Rhys’ Historical Imagination: Reading and Writing the Creole

Elaine Savory, Jean Rhys

Helen Carr, Jean Rhys

Carole Angier, Jean Rhys

Pierrette Frickey,Critical Perspectives on Jean Rhys

Sue Thomas, The Worlding of Jean Rhys

Mary Conde & Thorunn Lonsdale eds., Caribbean Women Writers: Fiction in English, Chap 5, ‘Literary Allusion in the fiction of Jean Rhys’

Nora Gaines, Jean Rhys Review

Coral Ann Howells, Jean Rhys

Mary Lou Emery, Jean Rhys at “World’s End”: Novels of Colonial and Sexual Exile

(for a reasonably reliable bio)

Antonia MacDonald-Smythe, Making Homes in the West Indies: Michele Cliff and Jamaica Kincaid

Moira Fergusson, Jamaica Kincaid: Where the land Meets the Body

Linda Lang-Peralta, ed., Jamaica Kincaid and Caribbean Double Crossings, Univ of Delaware Press, 2006

J.D Edwards, Understanding Jamaica Kincaid

Giovanni Covi, Jamaica Kincaid’s Prismatic Subjects

Special issue of the journal, Callaloo, 25.3 (2002) focuses on Kincaid’s work

(for a reasonably reliable bio)

Background reading on the Caribbean historical and literary context:

‘Gendering the Cribbean’ on SyD

Knight, F & Palmer, C(eds.) The Modern Caribbean

Reynolds, E Stand the Storm: A History of the Atlantic Slave Trade

O’Callaghan, E Woman Version: Theoretical Approaches to West Indian Fiction by Women

Shalini Puri, The Postcolonial Caribbean

Mimi Sheller, Consuming the Caribbean

Alison Donnell, Twentieth Century Caribbean Literature