Search

    Search Constraints

    Start Over You searched for: Collection Black Caribbean Literature (BCL) Remove constraint Collection: Black Caribbean Literature (BCL) Publication Year 2012 Remove constraint Publication Year: 2012 Subject Term Haiti Remove constraint Subject Term: Haiti

    Search Results

    1. The Shame of the Nation": the Force of Re-Enslavement and the Law of "Slavery" Under the Regime of Jean-Louis Ferrand in Santo Domingo, 1804-1809

    <span class="translation_missing" title="translation missing: en.bibleaves.discover_item">Discover Item</span>

    2. Soundscapes of disaster and humanitarianism: Survival singing, relief telethons, and the Haiti earthquake

    <span class="translation_missing" title="translation missing: en.bibleaves.discover_item">Discover Item</span>

    3. Rewriting history in Alejo Carpentier's The Kingdom of This World and Michelle Cliff's Abeng

    <span class="translation_missing" title="translation missing: en.bibleaves.discover_item">Discover Item</span>

    4. The economic history of the Caribbean since the Napoleonic wars

    <span class="translation_missing" title="translation missing: en.bibleaves.discover_item">Discover Item</span>

    5. Study focuses on Haitian media

    <span class="translation_missing" title="translation missing: en.bibleaves.discover_item">Discover Item</span>

    7. Entangled Roots: Race, Historical Literature, and Citizenship in the Nineteenth-Century Americas

    <span class="translation_missing" title="translation missing: en.bibleaves.discover_item">Discover Item</span>

    8. Messianism in French Caribbean Literature: Cesaire, Roumain, Glissant, and Schwarz-Bart

    <span class="translation_missing" title="translation missing: en.bibleaves.discover_item">Discover Item</span>

    9. "The Haitian turn": Haiti, the Black Atlantic, and black transnational consciousness

    <span class="translation_missing" title="translation missing: en.bibleaves.discover_item">Discover Item</span>

    10. Re-configuring paternal legacies through ritualistic art: Daughters and fathers in contemporary fiction by women of African descent

    <span class="translation_missing" title="translation missing: en.bibleaves.discover_item">Discover Item</span>