1-20 of 440 Search Results for

Caribbean radical tradition

Follow your search
Access your saved searches in your account

Would you like to receive an alert when new items match your search?
Close Modal
Sort by
Journal Article
Small Axe (2009) 13 (1): 217–229.
Published: 01 March 2009
...Carole Boyce Davies The authors response to Kevin Gaines' and Patricia Saunders' discussion of Left of Karl Marx: The Political Life of Black Communist Claudia Jones. Claudia Jones Small Axe Incorporated 2009 Sisters Outside: Tracing the Caribbean/Black Radical Intellectual Tradition...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2023) 27 (1 (70)): 52–58.
Published: 01 March 2023
.... Students visited the Black Archives (discussed in this special section); they also met with artists such as Patricia Kaersenhout and Charl Landvreugd to explore how their artworks fit within the tradition of Caribbean radical thought. 12 This form of pragmatic governance still describes contemporary...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2019) 23 (3 (60)): 50–68.
Published: 01 November 2019
..., and more widely, Spanish caribeños , within a Marxist-inflected Caribbean radical tradition. But the Pueblos Hispanos project highlights a more heterodox history of Puerto Rican nationalism than is generally suggested by these accounts. Pueblos Hispanos reminds us that the Nationalist Party was never...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Small Axe (2021) 25 (2 (65)): 169–170.
Published: 01 July 2021
...Mimi Sheller This essay reviews Aaron Kamugisha’s reading of the works of C. L. R. James and Sylvia Wynter in his 2019 book Beyond Coloniality: Citizenship and Freedom in the Caribbean Intellectual Tradition . Kamugisha issues a resounding call to reenergize the radical Caribbean intellectual...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2016) 20 (2 (50)): 187–198.
Published: 01 July 2016
... politics and society. Obika Gray and Maziki Thame contributed review essays, tackling many of the issues explored in the book, including the Caribbean black power movement, the Grenada Revolution and its demise, the contemporary state of Jamaican politics, Caribbean intellectual traditions...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2016) 20 (1 (49)): 37–46.
Published: 01 March 2016
..., Inc. 2016 Caribbean intellectual tradition Caribbean thought Sylvia Wynter, circa late 1950s. Photograph by Oswald Jones. Used with permission Sylvia Wynter, circa late 1950s. Photograph by Oswald Jones. Used with permission In 1971, after meeting at a conference at the Mona...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Small Axe (2019) 23 (3 (60)): 87–103.
Published: 01 November 2019
... of patriarchy and, at best, as a man caught between the feminist politics of the women in his life and the constraints of a male-centered Caribbean revolutionary and anticolonial tradition. By contrast, this essay argues that the feminism in the play must be read beyond James the man and instead in the context...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2013) 17 (1 (40)): 71–83.
Published: 01 March 2013
... of the political fortunes of black male leadership in the Caribbean as potentially thwarted by female authority, ancestral shame, and the objectification of tourist photography offers a useful way of conceptualizing the black radical tradition in terms of vulnerability as a condition to be avoided. Moreover...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2022) 26 (1 (67)): 205–208.
Published: 01 March 2022
..., and the place of diaspora in the remaking of Caribbean radical traditions. Her publications have appeared in the Annals of the Association of American Geographers ; Gender, Place, and Culture ; the Journal of Economic Geography ; Antipode ; the Review of International Political Economy ; Small Axe...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2021) 25 (2 (65)): 171–181.
Published: 01 July 2021
... of the (traditionally male) Caribbean intellectual tradition to speak to the feminist present (and the presence of feminism). James thus functions in Kamugisha’s discussion as an index of the usability of twentieth-century Caribbean radical history, or, as it turns out, a symptom of its uselessness. While...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2020) 24 (2 (62)): 35–52.
Published: 01 July 2020
... their abusers, to break the silence surrounding sexual abuse, and to advocate for survivors. Situating the Tambourine Army within traditions of women’s protest and contemporary forms of cyberactivism in the Caribbean, this essay examines the ways the group enacted a sonic disruption to the public and cyber...
FIGURES | View All (4)
Journal Article
Small Axe (2008) 12 (2): 168–178.
Published: 01 June 2008
...: University of Virginia Press, 2003). SX26 • June 2008 • Anthony Bogues | 173 only engaged with radical Caribbean thought but stands within the radical tradition in its own textual outlook. All these qualities of the text make it an important one, adding...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2020) 24 (3 (63)): 195–205.
Published: 01 November 2020
... to Montreal: Black Power, the Caribbean, and the Black Radical Tradition in Canada,” Journal of African American History 92, no. 4 (2007): 516–39; “Liberation from Below: The Caribbean Conference Committee and the Global New Left” (master’s thesis, University of Montreal, 2007); “In Search of a National...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2009) 13 (1): 193–202.
Published: 01 March 2009
... of black political agency and radicalism; the recovery of a tradition of Caribbean radicalism in the United States; and the displace- ment of an intellectual framework of bipolar cold war politics by a proliferation of scholarship situating US black struggles within a transnational analytical frame...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2013) 17 (2 (41)): 43–57.
Published: 01 July 2013
... intelligentsia is to have the moral and intellectual courage, and the epistemic daring , to demand the human after man. This epistemological daring lies at the heart of the Caribbean radical tradition. It suggests that our quest may well be for a Caribbean radical thought and a Caribbean studies rather than...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2023) 27 (3 (72)): 66–83.
Published: 01 November 2023
... conceptions and commitments. Second, how should we read Rodney and this book today? In which discursive contexts should it be situated? Is there a case to be made, as I have already suggested, for reading Rodney as part of a radical Black Caribbean radical tradition? If so, what is that case? Third, how...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2021) 25 (1 (64)): 47–60.
Published: 01 March 2021
... the region. Caribbean intellectuals have always been indelibly influenced by and been part of the formation of intellectual currents, from Marxism to the black radical tradition, which complicates the perennial questions: What constitutes the Caribbean? What is Caribbean studies? The study of Caribbean...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Small Axe (2021) 25 (2 (65)): 190–196.
Published: 01 July 2021
... Sheller’s that Beyond Coloniality “issues a resounding call to reenergize the radical Caribbean intellectual tradition, saving us from our own alienation, colonization, and ambivalence”; H. Reuben Neptune’s that the book is an “invaluable public intellectual service to the Caribbean”; and Raj Chetty’s...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2020) 24 (2 (62)): 197–207.
Published: 01 July 2020
... for black liberation. It is a historiography that incorporates the literatures of Pan-Africanism, Black Nationalism, Caribbean radical thought, and a range of thinkers and critical practices falling under the broad standard of the black radical tradition—thinkers who often, but not always, ride...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2016) 20 (2 (50)): 175–186.
Published: 01 July 2016
... that continue the critical tradition in Caribbean intellectual culture. Thus, notwithstanding these intellectuals' radicalism and their sharp critiques of political power and the rule of economic elites, both the ruling elites and mass publics in the region have typically reserved special appreciation—nay...