From April 1st through June 30th, @IllinoisPress has granted free access to the WGFC article “On Pursuing Scholarship That Makes Me Whole: Reflections of an Asian Woman Critical Feminist Scholar of Education” by @yoonha_choi ! Read it here:
https://t.co/SduWX5SNZH
The @IllinoisPress has made “‘Armed and Dangerous’: The Criminalization of Angela Davis and the Cold War Myth of America’s Innocence” by Meredith Roman temporarily free from now until May. Click the link to read it now!
https://t.co/6qeIDfafX8
To celebrate this Women’s History Month, @IllinoisPress is making WGFC essay “Women Community Warriors of St. Croix” by JoAnna Poblete temporarily free for the month of March! Read it now at https://t.co/x12JpBw7dm. Don’t miss it!
Read Grace Aneiza Ali’s “Women, Art, and Activism in Guyana,” which portrays how women artists have challenged negative images of Guyana in their work. https://t.co/TkMsYxHZHa #TheUnexpectedCaribbean
JoAnna Poblete’s “Women Community Warriors of St. Croix” focuses on women’s political involvement by weighing intimate relationships and career advancement. https://t.co/XSZ5JMoSqo #TheUnexpectedCaribbean
In “Dispatches from the Edge of Empire,” Jessica Adams contextualizes disaster, imperialism, and concepts of home in a three-part essay. Read it here: https://t.co/nD7QuwsSZe #TheUnexpectedCaribbean
Yumi Pak’s analysis of Patricia Powell’s The Pagoda brings to the forefront the tensions of colonial logic by virtue of race, gender, and sexuality: https://t.co/oNScBaboi6 #TheUnexpectedCaribbean
Odile Ferly’s “Contrapuntal Reflections” pays attention to the symbolic role of Dominicanness in the Haitian literary imaginary. https://t.co/JtdlbJs4UV #TheUnexpectedCaribbean
Apricot Irving challenges us to rethink how we assist others by inviting us to consider how power and positionality affect our interactions with Haiti. https://t.co/ODV64rhut5 #TheUnexpectedCaribbean
From Guyana and Haiti to St. Croix and the Dominican Republic, Caribbean society, women, art, and much more are explored by our contributors in special issue 9.1 “The Unexpected Caribbean – Part I”. https://t.co/RhjrLkGvay
We hope you will enjoy the conversation guest editors Cecile Accilien and @GiselleAnatol have convened in issue 9.1! You can find out more here: https://t.co/RcIR1aAhjg #TheUnexpectedCaribbean
Editors, Cecile Accilien and @GiselleAnatol, and authors, @ApricotIrving, Odile Ferly, Yumi Pak, Jessica Adams, JoAnna Poblete, and Grace Aneiza Ali come together in issue 9.1! https://t.co/RhjrLkGvay
Authors gathered in issue 9.1 challenge and rethink Otherness in various Caribbean spaces from a variety of scholarly and artistic perspectives. https://t.co/RhjrLkGvay #TheUnexpectedCaribbean
The essays in issue 9.1 are woven together by their explorations of the Other in the geographical and geopolitical space of the Caribbean. Read more here: https://t.co/RhjrLkGvay #TheUnexpectedCaribbean
From Guyana and Haiti to St. Croix and the Dominican Republic, Caribbean society, women, art, and much more are explored by our contributors in special issue 9.1 “The Unexpected Caribbean – Part I”. https://t.co/RhjrLkGvay
2/2 “Superficial understanding of the Caribbean that often gets proliferated by the travel industry, mainstream media, and even the former president of the United States ” https://t.co/QEdKXkd9nX