September 28, 2012

Five Questions With… Joseph McNair


Joe McNair has been a good friend for almost twenty years now, and the biography that he provided at the end of this interview does not do him any justice. Although he has retired from Miami Dade College, we still keep in touch, and when I learned about the publication of his new book, I Hear Music in the Air, I requested an interview, which he kindly granted.

1. There is a recurrent trope of the connection between jazz and spirituality, yet based on casual observations it would not seem as if many of these musicians could be regarded as spiritual people. Is there a connection?

Giving oneself over to the music is as special as a spiritual experience. This is why being overtaken by the muse is similar to getting high. What many musicians learn too late. Musicians grow into their spirituality when the music becomes as addictive as life itself. And playing good music requires a discipline as steadfast as getting high on a daily basis. One needs to develop spiritual tools to maintain their spirituality. Yes, there is a connection.

2. Many of the jazz greats did not seem to have lived "happy" lives, but the overwhelming tone of "I Hear Music in the Air" is triumphant. What am I missing?

Kicking any addiction is cause for celebration. As a recovering alcoholic, kicking alcohol is probably one of the most courageous and triumphant thugs I have ever done. and is something that I am most proud of.

3. Which musicians best embody the nexus between jazz/ water/liquid imagery in the collection?

The Neptunians such as Duke Ellington, Coleman Hawkins, Johnny Hodges, Ben Webster, Bennie Carter, Lester Young, Thelonius Monk, Charlie Parker, Dizzie Gillespie, John Coltrane, Milt Jackson, Jutta Hip, ART Tatum, Mile Davis, Fred Anderson, Alice Coltrane, Eric Dolphy, Sonny Rollins, Doc Austin, Dorothy Ashby, Freddie Hubbard, Joanne Brackeen, McCoy Tyner, Black Arthur Blythe, Chick Correa, AVotcja, and Winton Marsalis.

4. You've used several different poetic forms in the collection such as the sonnet, villanelle, and the Kwansaba. What attracted you to the Kwansaba?

The Kwansaba was invented by the Eugene B Redmond Writers group out of East Saint Louis Illinois. I was attracted due to my close association with Redmond. I used to follow him around years ago when He was a professor of English at Sacramento State University.

5. What makes you laugh?

The aggressive or obscene idea is activated in the unconscious but disguised by the wit-work (or technique) so that the psychic energy initially aroused can be safely relieved. According to Arthur Koestler metaphoric perception is, indeed, fundamental to all science and involves bringing together previously incompatible ideas in radically new ways.

In The Act of Creation, Arthur Koestler explores a similar notion, which he refers to as bisociation. Koestler himself makes use of a metaphor between “the logic of laughter” and the creative act, which he defines as “the perceiving of a situation or idea in two self-consistent but habitually incomparable frames of reference.”


Joe also provided me with an alternate answer to the first question.
A good friend asked me the following question: "There is a recurrent trope of the connection between jazz and spirituality, yet based on casual observations it would not seem as if many of these musicians could be regarded as spiritual people. Is there a connection?"
The following was my answer.


just as all humans are spiritual
to breathe according to philosopher
dane rudyar
is the first independent act that
expresses i am.
this action of independence
is to be independent
and relatively at least
self sufficient .
complete and
alive.
to breathe is to inhale the whole
world. to open oneself to the
air that has coursed through
millions of lungs that the sun has
kissed, the earth has scented and
the stars have blessed & exalted
to stop breathing and very soon the
the song is ended.
having refused to contact
the whole living world through
the magical performance of breathing
the body loses its significance and
disintegrates, it has been rendered useless
and meaningless.
when buddy bolden opened himself
to the air that that carried
the molecules and atoms of a million cultures
with a deep breath shaped by his embouchure
and sent that blown air sound
through closed lips, producing a "buzzing" sound
that starts a standing wave vibration in the air
column inside the instrument.
by playing daily and pitting himself against
all players, perfected his skills and broke through
the inertia of static tradition into a new world fluidic
and scintillating with light, a world of
strange perceptions and glamorous mirages
for some and transcendental realizations for others
he opened himself up to the air and the music
took him there. this i believe is true for any
musician of note. the black musical spiritual,
over my head i hear music in the air
came out of my breathing. as such
writers and musicians are connected
 
 

About Joe McNair




Joseph D. McNair is an African American educator, poet/writer, journalist, and musician. He is currently an Associate Professor, Senior in the School of Education at Miami Dade College, North Campus in Miami-Florida. He is the founder/editor of Asili: The Journal of Multicultural Heartspeak, an on-line literary magazine ten years old this year. He is a recipient of two of Miami Dade College's endowed teaching chairs. His published works include two volumes (Earthbook in 1971 and An Odyssey 1976) and one chapbook of poetry (Juba Girl in 1973). A collection of Selected Works is scheduled for release in early 2008. He has written three books for adolescent readers published by The Child's World Journey to Freedom: The African American Library series. These are Leontyne Price (2000), Barbara Jordan: African American Politician (2000), and Ralph Bunche (2001). His latest release, O Şe Şango, a novel, will be published by The Asili Press October/November 2007. As a journalist, he is the author of sixty-five feature articles and commentary written under his own name and several pseudonyms between 1986 and 1989 for Hotline Newsmagazine, a popular and influential Northern Nigerian weekly. In 1996 he authored a college textbook entitledMulticultural Awareness/Consciousness: Toward a Process of Personal Transformation. In 1997 he coauthored Individuals In Transition with three Social Science Colleagues. In 1998 he revised his first text under a new title: Personal Transformations: The Process of Multicultural Awareness/Consciousness. He is a prolific on-line author and manages several websites.


For more information about I Hear Music in the Air, please contact josephmcnair48 [at] yahoo.com

September 26, 2012

Marcus Garvey: A New Narrative


In a recent article in The Washington Post, David McFadden while discussing the introduction of Garveyism into Jamaican schools followed the typical narrative that many other reporters have used to describe Marcus Garvey’s legacy: “Garvey was eventually convicted of mail fraud charges in connection with his steamship line and was deported to Jamaica in 1927.

While the article was fair in reporting the challenges facing the educators, there is no mention of the judicial and prosecutorial irregularities surrounding the case that writers such as Colin Grant, Tony Martin, Robert Hill, Justin Hansford, have revealed in their studies of Marcus Garvey.

It is for this reason that the Marcus Garvey Celebrations Committee (Miami), Rootz Foundation, and the Institute for Caribbean Studies, have joined to petition President Barack Obama to exonerate the Right Honorable Marcus Mosiah Garvey, the first National Hero of Jamaica.

Now while some have chosen to view this request as an attack on President Obama, especially since began our petition began during the 125th anniversary of Marcus Garvey’s birth (which coincidentally is an election year), we view it as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for President Obama, an inheritor of Garvey's legacy, to set the record straight. It is also an opportunity for President Obama to honor Garvey’s memory as he had done previously in Dreams from my Father, where he quoted Garvey’s famous words, “Rise up, ye mighty race” (199).

So instead of the same old story, the new narrative about Marcus Garvey would read:

Marcus Garvey, the father of Pan-Africanism, was exonerated by President Barack Obama, who in signing the executive order noted Marcus Garvey’s role in the struggle for human rights in Africa, the Caribbean, and North America. Mr. Obama also addressed the judicial and prosecutorial irregularities surrounding the case, which as a legal scholar, he found extremely troubling.

“Marcus Garvey is a hero for all people who believe in justice,” said President Obama. “Garvey’s exoneration will clear the name of the calumnies that have tarnished this good man’s name and will restore his reputation as a leader in the struggle for human rights.”

800 million Africans at home and abroad are hoping you will do the right thing, Mr. President. Don’t let us down.


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September 24, 2012

Happy Birthday, Jan Carew !


Jan Rynveld Carew (born 24 September 1920 in Agricola, Guyana)  is a novelist, playwright, poet and educator. His works, diverse in form and multifaceted, make Jan Carew an important intellectual of the Caribbean world. His poetry and his first two novels, Black Midas and The Wild Coast, were significant landmarks of the West Indian literature then attempting to cope with its colonial past and assert its wish for autonomy. 

 Carew also played an important part in the Black movement gaining strength in England and North America, publishing reviews and newspapers, producing programs and plays for the radio and the television. His scholarly research drove him to question traditional historiographies and the prevailing historical models of the conquest of America. The way he reframed  Christopher Columbus as an historical character outside his mythical hagiography became a necessary path in his mind to build anew the Caribbean world on sounder foundations.



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September 23, 2012

Program and Posters for 2012 Miami Book Fair International Unveiled


Details for this year’s Miami Book Fair International, presented by The Center for Literature and Theatre @ Miami Dade College (MDC), were announced today at the Fair’s annual poster unveiling ceremony, and patrons can once again expect an exciting line-up of authors that will please every interest, from current events to biographies, from health and wellness to fiction.

This year, fairgoers are invited to “Discover Paraguay” as the Fair celebrates Paraguay’s unique literature and culture and will present some of its most recognized authors, as well as theater, music, and crafts.

The Inauguration Ceremonies will start at 4 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 11, followed by a reception. Tom Wolfe will open the Fair at 6 p.m. with a presentation of his latest work, Back to Blood: A Novel, and will be followed by a related documentary at 8 p.m. At 7 p.m., the Fair will also present haute couture power couple, Isabel and Ruben Toledo, in conversation about their unique collaboration and Isabel’s memoir, Roots of Style: Weaving Together Life, Love, and Fashion. The talk will be followed by a tour of TOLEDO/TOLEDO: Full Circle, an exhibition of her designs and his artworks at the MDC Museum of Art + Design.

The popular Evenings With series will bring some of today’s biggest names, including Junot Diaz (This is How You Lose Her), Sandra Cisneros (Have You Seen Marie?), Robert Caro (The Passage of Power: The Years of Lyndon Johnson) and Adam Gopnik (The Table Comes First: Family, France, and the Meaning of Food). Other authors scheduled to attend the Fair include Bill O’Reilly (Killing Kennedy), R.L. Stein (Red Rain), (Camille Paglia (Glittering Images: A Journey Through Art From Egypt to Star Wars) and Anne Lamott (Help, Thanks, Wow: The Three Essential Prayers). 

Children’s literacy is very much at the heart of the Fair’s mission. Among the many events for the under-18’s this year, is a very special appearance by Lemony Snicket on Monday, Nov. 12 (Veteran’s Day holiday is observed by schools and others—but the Book Fair is open!). Children and parents are invited to bring lists of wrong questions to this fun event celebrating the first book in Snicket’s brand new series, All the Wrong Questions: Who Could That Be at This Hour? Snicket is best known for his series, A Series of Unfortunate Events, which was made into a movie of the same title. Fair organizers are also proud to host bestselling author James Patterson on Sunday, Nov. 18, for a rally for literacy. Families with children of all ages are invited. Mr. Patterson will speak, read and take questions before the book signing.

The 29th edition of the Book Fair, the nation’s finest and largest literary gathering, will take place November 11 – 18, 2012, at Miami Dade MDC’s Wolfson Campus, 300 NE Second Ave., in downtown Miami. The always-popular Street Fair runs Friday through Sunday, November 16 – 18, with more than 200 exhibitors from around the country selling books in a festive atmosphere.

The official posters also were unveiled. The first poster, which aims to capture the overall spirit of the Fair, was created by RosaNaday Garmendia. A native of Havana, Cuba, Naday Garmendia is a professional artist and educator. She is an artist-in-residence at the Miami Art Museum and at the ArtCenter/South Florida. She was also an artist-in-residence at the Miami Children’s Museum for two consecutive terms. Garmendia had a working studio at the Bakehouse Art Complex for several years and in the course of developing as an artist has done several residencies at Parsons School of Design and Vermont School of Design.

The second official poster is dedicated to the Center’s Generation Genius programs for children, tweens and teens at the Fair, including the beloved Children’s Alley, an area featuring pop-up venues where kids play and create, learn and read!. The poster was designed by renowned American author and artist Daniel Kirk, who has written and illustrated more than 21 bestselling books for children, including the Library Mouse series, Cat Power; Dogs Rule!, Hush, Little Alien, Lunchroom Lizard, and Snow Dude.  His more recent work includes Elf Realm, a series of young-adult fantasy. 

MIAMI BOOK FAIR INTERNATIONAL AND THE CENTER FOR LITERATURE AND THEATRE @ MIAMI DADE COLLEGE

Miami Book Fair International is the largest and finest literary gathering in America. It is the premier event of The Center for Literature and Theatre @ Miami Dade College. The Centerpromotes reading, writing and theater at locations throughout South Florida by consistently presenting activities open to all. Its Generation Genius programs for children and teens promote literacy and learning. Its creative writing program has national appeal, and courses are taught by local and visiting authors. It is also home to Prometeo Theatre, the nation's leading Spanish language, conservatory-style program offering training for actors, and featuring performances throughout the year. In 2012, the Center celebrates its tenth year with a renewed commitment to the advancement of literary and theater arts.

Miami Book Fair International is made possible through the generous support of the State of Florida and the National Endowment for the Arts; the City of Miami; Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs and the Cultural Affairs Council, the Miami-Dade County Mayor and Board of County Commissioners; Miami-Dade County Public Schools; the Greater Miami Convention and Visitors Bureau; the Miami Downtown Development; and the Friends of the Fair; as well as many corporate partners.

ABOUT MIAMI DADE COLLEGE

Miami Dade College has a long and rich history of involvement in the cultural arts, providing South Florida with a vast array of artistic and literary offerings including the Miami Book Fair International, the Center @ MDC, the Miami International Film Festival, the MDC Live Performing Arts Series, the Cuban Cinema Series, the Miami Leadership Roundtable speakers’ series, numerous renowned campus art galleries and theaters, and the nationally recognized School of Entertainment and Design Technology. With an enrollment of more than 170,000 students, MDC is the largest institution of higher education in the country and is a national model for many of its programs. The college’s eight campuses and outreach centers offer more than 300 distinct degree programs including baccalaureate, associate in arts and science degrees and numerous career training certificates leading to in-demand jobs. MDC has served nearly 2,000,000 students since it opened its doors in 1960.






September 22, 2012

A Vulgar Contradiction



David McFadden, a reporter with the Washington Post, has written an article,"Jamaica hopes introducing Marcus Garvey’s teachings to kids will transform struggling society," in which he outlines the challenges of teaching Garveyism in Jamaica. 

While the Jamaican government is to be congratulated for implementing Garvey's work into the curriculum it is also a vulgar contradiction to honor Marcus Garvey's greatness while his reputation continues to be tarnished by the US government on trumped up charges of mail fraud. 

This is why the Marcus Garvey Celebrations Committee (South Florida), Rootz Foundation, and the Institute for Caribbean Studies, have joined to petition President Barack Obama to exonerate the Right Honorable Marcus Mosiah Garvey, the first National Hero of Jamaica.


It is hoped that Garvey's exoneration will accomplish three goals:

1. In the name of justice, initiate the PUBLIC rehabilitation of the good name/character of Marcus Garvey:

2. Honor the legacy hero in the struggle for Black identity

3. Reintroduce Marcus Garvey's ideas of self-reliance, personal responsibility, and success into the body politic.

Here is the link to the petition: http://signon.org/sign/exonerate-marcus-garvey?source=c.url&r_by=4631897


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The documents posted on this Web site may contain hypertext links or pointers to information created and maintained by other public and private organizations. These links and pointers are provided for visitors' convenience. I do not control or guarantee the accuracy, relevance, timeliness, or completeness of any linked information. Further, the inclusion of links or pointers to other Web sites or agencies is not intended to assign importance to those sites and the information contained therein, nor is it intended to endorse, recommend, or favor any views expressed, or commercial products or services offered on these outside sites, or the organizations sponsoring the sites, by trade name, trademark, manufacture, or otherwise.

Reference in this Web site to any specific commercial products, processes, or services, or the use of any trade, firm or corporation name is for the information and convenience of the site's visitors, and does not constitute endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by this blog.

September 21, 2012

Blog Action Day 2012: The Power of We



On October 15, 2012, I will be participating in Blog Action Day. The theme is The Power of We (#powerofwe), which I should really re-name as The Power of I&I—for it will take I&I to bring about any meaningful change.

As my regular readers will have guessed, I plan to blog about the petition to exonerate Marcus Garvey, the father of Pan-Africanism

This is an important cause to me(I) and I hope you (the I) will join I&I in The Power of I&I  to exonerate my hero, Marcus Mosiah Garvey.

Here is the link to register your blog and to join The Power of We: http://blogactionday.org/register-to-take-part/

Bless.



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Reference in this Web site to any specific commercial products, processes, or services, or the use of any trade, firm or corporation name is for the information and convenience of the site's visitors, and does not constitute endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by this blog.

September 20, 2012

VONA Voices: Writing Workshops for Writers of Color



The Miami Workshop at the University of Miami with VONA faculty Chris Abani, Elmaz Abinader, Willie Perdomo, M. Evelina Galang and Director Diem Jones taking applications for MLK Weekend 2013 NOW: 

http://www.as.miami.edu/english/creativewriting/voices-at-um 

Writers of Color, This is Your Weekend!

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September 19, 2012

A Recap of “Marcus Garvey: (Still) The Most Dangerous Black Man in America,”

(L.-R) Alda Noronha-Nimmo, Josett Peat, Karean Williams and Geoffrey Philp
Marcus Garvey: (Still) The Most Dangerous Black Man in America


The turnout for my presentation, “Marcus Garvey: (Still) the Most Dangerous Black Man in America,” was overwhelming, and I have to thank the faculty, staff, students, and Facebook friends for their support. Room 2151, which has maximum seating capacity of 250, didn’t have an empty chair and according to the door monitors, Jeff Green and Ildiko Barsony, we had to turn away approximately 50-100 students and guests from Miami Dade North, Barry College, and Florida International University.

My preparation for the lecture began three weeks ago, and I had two general goals 

1. To encourage voter turnout
2. To educate the audience about Marcus Garvey, Black Star Line, and Marcus Garvey’s trial and conviction, and the petition to exonerate Marcus Garvey.

I conducted a pre-lecture survey of likely attendees and 69.8% of the students said they were going to vote in the next election, which made my goal of reaching at least 75% seem feasible.

However, the next goal of educating the students about Marcus Garvey, Black Star Line, and Marcus Garvey’s trial and conviction, and the petition to exonerate Marcus Garvey seemed a bit more daunting.

On a scale of 1-5 (1 being no knowledge at all and 5 being excellent knowledge) most students knew very little about the topics I was going to cover in the lecture.





The responses for 1 (no knowledge at all) ranged from 59.5% on “How would you rate your knowledge of Marcus Garvey to 74.4% on “How would you rate your level of knowledge about Marcus Garvey’s trial and imprisonment.

When one considers Marcus Garvey’s influence in North, Central and South America, the countries of origin for many of our students, the thoroughness of Garvey’s erasure from our collective memory becomes apparent. I suspect that this trend will hold true across the general population.

This is a frightening statistic in a college that has over 150, 000 students with a demographic of 18% Black Non-Hispanic, and 8% White Non-Hispanic, and 71% Hispanic. At the North Campus, there is a slightly larger Black Non-Hispanic population with 38% Black Non-Hispanic, 6% White Non-Hispanic, and 52% Hispanic.

What is even more frightening is that Garvey is a symbol of that question that Professor Roy Augier posed in a similar context, “How will we negotiate the African presence in the Americas?”

On the best known quotes of Marcus Garvey from The Philosophy and Opinions of Marcus Garvey is “A people without the knowledge of their past history, origin and culture is like a tree without roots.” From the results of this survey it seems as if I have a lot of work ahead of me—right in my own backyard.

In the meantime, it will be interesting to see the post-lecture results.


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September 17, 2012

Marcus Garvey: (Still) The Most Dangerous Black Man in America.


On September 18, 2012, Professor Geoffrey Philp using The Philosophy and Opinions of Marcus Garvey as a starting point, combines texts, music, and video into a compelling presentation "Marcus Garvey: (Still) The Most Dangerous Black Man in America." The lecture, which is part of the events sponsored by the Institute for Civic Engagement and Democracy’s Dive into Democracy campaign, culminates in a turn out the vote drive aimed at increasing the number of student and community voters.

"The injustices committed against Marcus Garvey, including the denial of his most basic human rights will be highlighted," said Professor Philp. "The research of legal scholars and historians such as Tony Martin, Robert Hill, Colin Grant, and Justin Hansford will support the online petition to exonerate Marcus Garvey, http://bit.ly/KqUrGh, which is featured at the end of the presentation."


September 18, 2012
Time: 11:15—12:30
Room 2151
Miami Dade College, North Campus
11380 NW 27 Avenue, Miami, FL 33167

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September 14, 2012

Five Questions With... Pamela Mordecai


Pamela Mordecai, author of Subversive Sonnets


1. What on earth possessed you to write sonnets in this day and age?

Sneaky, Geoff! That’s two questions in one! So, first: What on earth possessed you to write sonnets in this day and age? 

The sonnet has been around a while, six hundred years or so, but we can still consider it modern because, though it’s fallen out of favour a couple times, it’s come back and held its own right up to the present. It’s also adapted over time and proved very versatile. So Sonnette (her German name) is an old girl who’s weathered well! Though free verse or vers libre has been around for much of that time, and some poets have ditched formal poetry once and for all, many poets have kept writing in traditional forms, including the sonnet form. And there are poets like Rainer Maria Rilke and Derek Walcott, for example, who write both free and formal verse. 

The second question is What on earth possessed you to write sonnets in this day and age?

Simplest answer is that I find that having a pre-established form to depend on when I write poetry can be very useful. This time, the sonnet seemed to fit the bill.

2. Why did you choose the title, Subversive Sonnets? It seems almost oxymoronic.
 
It is oxymoronic. (I specially like the moronic part.) For a long time the working title was Litany on the Line: subversive sonnets in thirty-three sequences. But when I put that title up on FB, friends said, just call it “Subversive Sonnets!” The title is to the point, since I wanted to sabotage and disrupt both the form and content of the sonnet. I wasn’t going to observe the set forms of Petrarch or Shakespeare. I wanted to bang the form about a bit, as others have done before. My banging about was going to be different though. I intended to write in patwa, aka the demotic (from the Greek root demos = the common people, as in democratic), and I was also going to mash up English and/or creole with other languages: Shona, Cree, kwéyol, Spanish, French, Latin. I also wanted to treat everyday subjects in a down-to-earth way – seriously but matter-of-factly. I think of the poems as having a low rather than high seriousness., but a seriousness all the same. There’s one, “Thomas Thistlewood and Tom” about a slave being given Derby’s Dose. That’s about as basic as one can get! But it’s a love poem as well, and sonnets started out as love poems. 

3. Why did you livicate "Lace Makers" to Tony McNeill?

“Lace Makers” was an offering I made to Tony ages ago probably to celebrate those ‘embroidered’ lines at the ends of some of his poems. I don’t know any other poets who use this concrete embroidery in their poetry, though there may be some. That makes him a lace-maker. Also, he’s a good, very old friend. We shared troubled times. He helped me with my writing. I still think he’s the most original poetic talent in the Caribbean, laureates included. And he is (or was) a wild creature, a force of nature and a maker of exquisite things, like Rosie in the poem.

4. Many of the poems exhibit a fear of mania, yet in "Bluesman," there seems to be an embrace. Why the change?

I, who have a collection of poetry called Certifiable, really hope none of the poems ‘exhibit a fear of mania’! Mania is in many cases the condition of honest, deeply engaged people whose chemical or physiological wiring has gone wrong.  Phineas Gage is a good example. There’s a theory of ‘madness’ based on disturbed persons having a direct, unremitting engagement with ‘reality’, which is, of course, so horrible that it drives them to distraction. Antipsychotic drugs are often described as inserting a filter (missing in ‘mad’ people, present in ‘sane’ people) between the psyche and the assaulting world outside, so that the contact with outside stimuli is not so intense. You’re right about the embrace in “Bluesman” but I wonder if the other poems aren’t peculiar embraces of the same sort? “Family Story, only child’s version” ends, “Careful then, how you cross me.” It’s an empowered position on the part of the unbalanced only child, with the mother whom she makes “walk and jabber to herself,” and the grandfather who took his own life. At the end of “No problema, doc, the persona makes the paradoxical statement, “When I do harm, it’s harmlessly.” Well, will she or won’t she harm harmlessly? What does the poem suggest will be the effect if her harmless harming? Isn’t she in control, however frayed her life? Doesn’t she toy with her therapist? Describe the signs of her condition with humour, however twisted? And so on… 

5. Akan, Igbo and Catholic spirituality converge in your collection. Were you uncomfortable with this poetic ecumenism?

It’s Akan, Igbo and Catholic spirituality that converge. Ecumenism is about religion. Religion is the organized affair that ‘s resulted over the centuries in our fighting and killing one another. Spirituality involves the spirit in each of us reaching out, in the way we know best, to The Great Spirit Out There, however we name that spirit. 





About Pamela Mordecai:

Pamela Mordecai writes poetry, fiction and plays. Her four previous collections of poetry are Journey Poem; de man: a performance poem; Certifiable and The True Blue of Islands. Her first collection of short fiction, Pink Icing and Other Stories, appeared in 2006. Her writing for children is widely collected and well known internationally. El Numero Uno, a play for young people, had its world premiere at the Lorraine Kimsa Theatre for Young People in Toronto in 2010. She lives in Kitchener, Ontario.



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September 12, 2012

The Caribbean Writer, Volume 26.


The Caribbean Writer publishes its Volume 26 issue, dedicated to Nature and Ecology

The University of the Virgin Islands continues the celebration of its 50th Anniversary with the release of Volume 26 of its international literary gem, The Caribbean Writer, a volume dedicated to nature and overflowing with brilliant writing and art in celebration of the natural environment.

Volume 26 boasts of literary content which covers a number of genres, to include poetry, personal essays, short stories, and book reviews and is visually stunning as well with Cover Art by Amy Laskin from Jamaica, which features a detailed painting of a croton set into a pristine, verdant landscape. It is a landscape which is a Caribbean icon.

“We are pleased to continue in the tradition of excellence which both the University and The Caribbean Writer represent with this new volume of the journal,” said UVI President David Hall. “It is this spirit of excellence that has ensured the success and vitality of the journal for so many years.”

This volume of The Caribbean Writer is edited by Tregenza A. Roach, a local poet and author who has been widely published in the journal and who has served on the University’s Adjunct Faculty since 1999, teaching courses in writing, the humanities, and public education law.

“It was really an honor and privilege to have been chosen to edit this volume,” Roach said, reflecting on the approximate 800 submissions which were reviewed in order to select the pieces for final publication. Roach thanked the Journal’s Editorial Board whose members participated actively in the paring down process and who contributed greatly to this keepsake publication, and Assistant Editor Quilin Mars for her dedicated service.

The Editorial Board includes UVI faculty members David Gould and Elaine Warren Jacobs, former faculty member Ruby Simmonds Essanasson, and Edgar O. Lake, local poet and novelist.

“We are pleased that this volume has drawn such an array of art and literature from across the Caribbean diaspora—from literally every place where Caribbean people and their descendants have lived or settled,” Roach added.

The issue also addresses the area of literary criticism, featuring two special sections, “Ecowomanist Gardens in the New World” by Debbie-Ann Morrison and “So Who IS a Caribbean Writer and Other Questions,” a section which draws on the thoughts and opinions of a noteworthy pool of persons who offer their special insights. The section is edited by The Caribbean Writer’s Founding Editor Erika J. Waters.

Of the special volume dedicated to nature, Roach said, “We received an astounding number of selections, a literal outpouring which will appeal to the various senses, but which also should leave us painfully aware that we are stewards, each and all, charged with protecting and preserving, limiting the destruction which so often is left in our wake.”

The Volume is a celebration as well for a number of local writers who will be published in the Journal either for the first time or who are making repeat appearances. These include Charlene Matthew and Kate Melone, writing from St. Croix and David Knight Jr., writing out of St. John. The journal also features book reviews by local writers to include Lake, Noreen Michael, Valerie Knowles Combie, S.B. Jones Hendrickson, Clement A. White, and Althea Romeo-Mark.

To order copies of Volume 26, please email Quilin Mars at qmars@live.uvi.edu or orders@thecaribbeanwriter.org. Orders can also be placed at www.thecaribbeanwriter.org via the secure server order page.

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Imagined Nations, 50 Years Later: Reflections on Independence and Federation in the Caribbean





The 31st Annual Meeting of the West Indian Literature Conference
Imagined Nations, 50 Years Later: Reflections on Independence and Federation in the Caribbean

Caribbean Literary and Cultural Studies at the University of Miami
October 11-13th, 2012
University of Miami 
Coral Gables, Miami, FL



Conference Description

In 2012 Trinidad and Tobago and Jamaica celebrate the 50th Anniversary of their independence from Britain. However, while 2012 marks these very auspicious occasions, it is also the 50th anniversary of the collapse of the West Indies Federation. Anniversaries encourage and even demand reflection and re-visitations of the expectations, opportunities lost and those well used, the failures and achievements as well as the considerations that attended these occasions. For more than fifty years, novelists, poets, visual artists and other cultural workers have been actively involved in imagining, revising and challenging the project of independence and the future it promised for so many. 

The 50th Anniversary is an excellent opportunity to revisit the movement towards and attainment of independence; the arts movements that emerged out of these nationalist projects; the cultural institutions that gave expression to the changes taking place; the rise and collapse of the West Indian Federation and the implications of all of these developments for the Caribbean region in the new era of globalization. Moreover, this occasion provides an important critical crossroad for us to consider the extent to which dialogues about independence and Federation have preoccupied not only writers, but also artists working in a number of different mediums in the Caribbean region. To this end, the 31st West Indian Literature Conference invites writers, cultural practitioners and scholars to submit papers that engage a wide range of critical perspectives on the various representations of both independence and the rise and fall of the West Indian Federation.

Panel presentations will consider these and other themes and topics:

Literary Nationalism in Trinidad and Jamaica
The Architecture of Independence
Narrative Intentions: Mapping the Landscapes of Independence
Bodies of (In)difference: Gender, Sexuality and Nationhood
Flexible Citizens, Rigid Borders: Migration and Diaspora
Pan-Caribbeanism and discourses of regional integration
States of Independence – Puerto Rico and the US
Political Leadership: Past, Present and Future
Caribbean Women's Literature: Configuring of a political voice/space.
New artistic articulations and revisions of the (post)independence project
Rhythm-Nations: Music, Poetry and Performance
Pedagogies of Independence
Colonization in Reverse: Caribbean and Britain
Comparative Contemplations: Decolonization in the French, Hispanic and Dutch Caribbean
Cultural Performance and the Politics of Nation

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Disclaimer of Endorsement


The documents posted on this Web site may contain hypertext links or pointers to information created and maintained by other public and private organizations. These links and pointers are provided for visitors' convenience. I do not control or guarantee the accuracy, relevance, timeliness, or completeness of any linked information. Further, the inclusion of links or pointers to other Web sites or agencies is not intended to assign importance to those sites and the information contained therein, nor is it intended to endorse, recommend, or favor any views expressed, or commercial products or services offered on these outside sites, or the organizations sponsoring the sites, by trade name, trademark, manufacture, or otherwise.

Reference in this Web site to any specific commercial products, processes, or services, or the use of any trade, firm or corporation name is for the information and convenience of the site's visitors, and does not constitute endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by this blog.