• français 
    • español
    • English
    • français
  • FacebookPinterestTwitter
  • español
  • English
  • français
Voir le document 
  •   Accueil de DIGIBUG
  • 1.-Investigación
  • Departamentos, Grupos de Investigación e Institutos
  • Departamento de Traducción e Interpretación
  • DTI - Capítulos de Libros
  • Voir le document
  •   Accueil de DIGIBUG
  • 1.-Investigación
  • Departamentos, Grupos de Investigación e Institutos
  • Departamento de Traducción e Interpretación
  • DTI - Capítulos de Libros
  • Voir le document
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Sexuality and Identity in the Caribbean Poetry of Opal Palmer Adisa

[PDF] 2011_UAB_Serna Martínez _Sexuality.pdf (13.12Mo)
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/110745
ISBN: 9788497884686
ISBN: 9788493954529
Exportar
RISRefworksMendeleyBibtex
Estadísticas
Statistiques d'usage de visualisation
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complète
Auteur
Serna Martínez, Elisa
Editorial
Universitat Autáonoma de Barcelona
Materia
Caribbean poetry
 
Opal Palmer Adisa
 
Sexuality
 
Date
2011-11-11
Referencia bibliográfica
Serna Martínez, E. Sexuality and Identity in the Caribbean Poetry of Opal Palmer Adisa. En: Falconí Trávez, D. y Acedo, N. (ed. lit.). El Cuerpo del significante: La literatura contemporánea desde las teorías corporales. Universitat Autáonoma de Barcelona, 2011. Págs. 25–30. ISBN 9788497884686
Résumé
This chapter analyzes how Opal Palmer Adisa’s poetry reclaims sexuality and redefines Afro-Caribbean female identity by turning patriarchal insults into sites of meaning-making and resistance. Focusing on the poem “Bumbu Clat,” it traces the term’s semantic drift from an original sense linked to women’s solidarity to its later misogynistic use, and shows how Adisa’s writing performs a deliberate deconstruction of the word’s derogatory charge. The chapter reads Adisa’s strategy through postcolonial debates on language and power (Nation Language/Creole vs. standard English), and through theoretical lenses drawn from deconstruction and feminist/poststructuralist thought. By foregrounding the female body as lived experience rather than object of study, Adisa’s poetic voice dismantles cultural taboos around menstruation and sexuality, reconnects the Caribbean present to African linguistic and oral traditions (including Anansi stories and reggae invocations), and opens an alternative epistemology in which voice, body, and history co-produce agency.
Colecciones
  • DTI - Capítulos de Libros

Mon compte

Ouvrir une sessionS'inscrire

Parcourir

Tout DIGIBUGCommunautés et CollectionsPar date de publicationAuteursTitresSujetsFinanciaciónPerfil de autor UGRCette collectionPar date de publicationAuteursTitresSujetsFinanciación

Statistiques

Statistiques d'usage de visualisation

Servicios

Pasos para autoarchivoAyudaLicencias Creative CommonsSHERPA/RoMEODulcinea Biblioteca UniversitariaNos puedes encontrar a través deCondiciones legales

Contactez-nous | Faire parvenir un commentaire