This volume offers an interdisciplinary approach to six examples of West Indian fiction, combining symbolic anthropology with traditional literary criticism. Focusing on works by George Lamming and Wilson Harris, two vastly dissimilar Caribbean writers, Joyce Jonas identifies an emerging West Indian aesthetic, stressing the conflict between oral and written communication, and between folk culture and imperialist domination. By applying post-modernist literary theories to the texts, Dr Jonas explores colonization as a key metaphor for exploitation of gender, class, race and environment.
This volume offers an interdisciplinary approach to six examples of West Indian fiction, combining symbolic anthropology with traditional literary cri...