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Publications

 
Book

Jamaica’s Difficult Subjects: Negotiating Sovereignty in Anglophone Caribbean Literature and Criticism 

 

Articles
 

“Global Sisyphus: Re-reading the Jamaican Sixties through A Brief History of Seven Killings,” Small Axe: A Caribbean Journal of Criticism 54, (November 2017).

 

“The Neoliberal Novel of Migrancy,” Neoliberalism and Culture, eds. Mitchum Huehls and Rachel Greenwald Smith, (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2017).

Review of J. Dillon Brown & Leah Reade Rosenberg (eds.), Beyond Windrush: Rethinking Postwar Anglophone Caribbean Literature (Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2015). New West Indian Guide 91 (2017): 50-51. 

Twenty-First Century West Indian Fiction,” The Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Literature (March 2017).

 

Review of Giselle Liza Anatol, The Things That Fly In The Night: Female Vampires In Literature Of The Circum-Caribbean And African Diaspora (New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 2015). ALH Online Review, Series VIII (2016).

             

 “Excess in A Brief History of Seven Killings.” Contemporaries 24 October 2015.

Tourism is Forever” Review of Matthew Parker, Goldeneye, Where James Bond Was Born: Ian Fleming’s Jamaica (New York: Pegasus Books, 2015). Los Angeles Review of Books (9 June 2015).

             

Fighting Madness, Making Caribbeanness” Review of Kelly Baker Josephs, Disturbers of the Peace: Representations of Madness in Anglophone Caribbean Literature (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2013). Anthurium: A Caribbean Studies Journal 12.2 (2015).  

“#tessnation: Nation and Diaspora in the Twenty-First Century.” Los Angeles Review of Books 3 March 2014.

 

 “‘Who worked this evil, brought distance between us?’ The Politics of Sexual Interaction in Sylvia Wynter’s The Hills of Hebron.” Modern Fiction Studies 59.1 (2013): 156-174.

 

Rev. of Christian Fumagalli, Caribbean Perspectives on Modernity: Returning Medusa’s Gaze (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2009). The Journal of Haitian Studies 16.2 (2010): 205-208.

 

“‘Yes, ma’am, Mr. Lowe:’ Lau A-Yin and the Politics of Gender and Sexuality in Patricia Powell’s The Pagoda,” Anthurium: A Caribbean Studies Journal 7.1

(2009).

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