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About The Book
Description
Author
<div>Recognizing that in the contemporary postcolonial moment national identity and cultural nationalism are no longer the primary modes of imagining sovereignty Sheri-Marie Harrison argues that postcolonial critics must move beyond an identity-based orthodoxy as they examine problems of sovereignty. In <i>Jamaica's Difficult Subjects: Negotiating Sovereignty in Anglophone Caribbean Literature and Criticism</i> Harrison describes what she calls difficult subjects-subjects that disrupt essentialized notions of identity as equivalent to sovereignty. She argues that these subjects function as a call for postcolonial critics to broaden their critical horizons beyond the usual questions of national identity and exclusion/inclusion.<br> &nbsp;<br> Harrison turns to Jamaican novels creative nonfiction and films from the 1960s to the present and demonstrates how they complicate standard notions of the relationship between national identity and sovereignty. &nbsp;She constructs a lineage between the difficult subjects in classic Caribbean texts like <i>Wide Sargasso Sea</i> by Jean Rhys and <i>The Harder they Come</i> by Perry Henzell and contemporary writing by Marlon James and Patricia Powell. What results is a sweeping new history of Caribbean literature and criticism that reconfigures how we understand both past and present writing. <i>Jamaica's Difficult Subjects</i> rethinks how sovereignty is imagined organized and policed in the postcolonial Caribbean opening new possibilities for reading multiple generations of Caribbean writing.</div>