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Phyllis Coard

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Journal Article
Small Axe (2022) 26 (3 (69)): 164–173.
Published: 01 November 2022
... and Gill-Sadler, respectively, to inform a close reading of Phyllis Coard’s memoir Unchained: A Caribbean Woman’s Journey through Invasion, Incarceration, and Liberation (2019). The author argues that Coard’s representation of her body under incarceration serves to push her humanity into the consciousness...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2022) 26 (3 (69)): 144–152.
Published: 01 November 2022
... of the Grenada Revolution. As it highlights Lambert’s attention to Joan Purcell’s truncated temporal framing of the Grenada Revolution, the essay offers a close reading of Phyllis Coard’s memoir to elaborate the significance of temporality in literary representations of the revolution and to question how...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2007) 11 (1): 39–66.
Published: 01 February 2007
... value systems, to identify ideas and new ways of pushing our country forward. It is only if we achieve this unity of the man and the woman that we would be able to move forward.3 Phyllis Coard, member of the Central Committee (CC) of the ruling NJM and president of the National Women’s...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2010) 14 (1 (31)): vii–viii.
Published: 01 March 2010
... Stroude, Hudson Austin, Liam James, Leon Cornwall, John Ventour, Dave Bartholomew, Ewart Layne, Colville McBarnette, Selwyn Strachan, and Cecil Prime. Phyllis Coard was not named because she had been granted leave in 2000 to seek medical treatment in Jamaica. And the soldiers...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2007) 11 (1): v–x.
Published: 01 February 2007
..., Christopher Stroude, Liam James, Leon Cornwall, Selwyn Strachan, Phyllis Coard, John Ventour, Ewart Layne, Colville McBarnette, Dave Bartholomew, Lester Redhead, Cecil Prime, Cosmos Richardson, Andy Mitchell, Vincent Joseph, and Callistus Bernard. After all, it is scarcely deniable...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2020) 24 (3 (63)): vii–x.
Published: 01 November 2020
... and driving me at a furious speed to his house to be welcomed and fed by his wife, Avis. 7 See Richard Hart, The Grenada Trial: A Travesty of Justice (Kingston: Foundation for Phyllis Coard, 1996), and The Grenada Revolution: Setting the Record Straight (London: Caribbean Labour Solidarity, 2005...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2016) 20 (2 (50)): 175–186.
Published: 01 July 2016
..., spreading rumors about an assassination threat by Bernard and Phyllis Coard and then lying about it, and taking the crowd that freed him from house arrest directly to Fort Rupert rather than to a nearby public square where he might have spoken to them about options or negotiated with his adversaries...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2016) 20 (2 (50)): 187–198.
Published: 01 July 2016
... that circulated in the days after Bishop's return that Phyllis and Bernard Coard were trying to kill him. When the party met to discuss this, Errol George, Bishop's number-two security detail, said that it was Bishop himself who had given the instruction, to which he (Bishop) refused to respond. This stunning...
Journal Article
Small Axe (2010) 14 (1 (31)): 79–163.
Published: 01 March 2010
...  |  The Fragility of Memory: An Interview with Merle Collins We Mess Up DS: Famously of course, when Bishop returns from Eastern Europe and Cuba, there is the rumor that Phyllis and Bernard [Coard] are planning to assassinate Maurice. Did you know Phyllis well in Grenada...