Jamaican literature
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Jamaican literature is internationally renowned, with the island of Jamaica being the home or birthplace of many important authors. One of the most distinctive aspects of Jamaican literature is its use of the local dialect — a variation of English, the country's official language. Known to Jamaicans as "patois", and now sometimes described as "nation language", this creole has become an important element in Jamaican fiction, poetry and theater.
Notable writers and intellectuals from elsewhere in the Caribbean region studied at the
Folk beginnings
The tradition of storytelling in Jamaica is a long one, beginning with
Perhaps the most popular character in Jamaican tales,
Development of the literature
Jamaican Thomas MacDermot (1870–1933) is credited with fostering the creation of Jamaican literature. According to critic Michael Hughes, MacDermot was "probably the first Jamaican writer to assert the claim of the West Indies to a distinctive place within English-speaking culture,"[2] and his Becka's Buckra Baby[3] as the beginning of modern Caribbean literature.
Jamaican-born
Notable Jamaican writers
- Opal Palmer Adisa, writer, poet, performance artist
- Lindsay Barrett, poet, novelist, journalist
- Edward Baugh, poet and scholar
- Louise Bennett-Coverley, poet, folklorist, actress, educator
- James Berry, poet, anthologist
- Eliot Bliss, novelist and poet
- Jonathan Braham, novelist
- Erna Brodber, novelist, poet
- Margaret Cezair-Thompson
- Colin Channer, novelist, short-story writer
- Kwame Dawes, poet, critic
- Jean D'Costa, novelist, scholar
- Herbert de Lisser, journalist and author
- Ferdinand Dennis, novelist, journalist and broadcaster
- Nicole Dennis-Benn, novelist
- Marcia Douglas, novelist, poet, performer
- Gloria Escoffery, painter, poet and art critic
- Esther Figueroa, novelist, environmental activist, filmmaker
- John Figueroa, poet, educator
- Honor Ford-Smith, actress, playwright, scholar and poet
- Ifeona Fulani, novelist, educator
- Lorna Goodison, poet
- John Hearne, novelist, journalist and teacher
- A. L. Hendriks, poet and critic
- Nalo Hopkinson, science fiction writer
- Marlon James, novelist
- Evan Jones, poet, novelist
- Linton Kwesi Johnson, poet
- Barbara Lalla, novelist, scholar
- Thomas MacDermot, poet, novelist and editor
- Roger Mais, novelist
- Rachel Manley, memoirist, poet
- Una Marson, poet, playwright
- Shara McCallum, poet, essayist
- Diana McCaulay, novelist, short story writer, environmental activist
- Claude McKay, poet and novelist
- Anthony McNeill, poet
- Una Marson, poet, playwright, journalist
- Kei Miller, poet
- Pamela Mordecai, poet, novelist, short story writer
- Mervyn Morris, poet, scholar, essayist
- Mutabaruka, poet
- Rex Nettleford, scholar, social critic
- Cyril Palmer, writer
- Orlando Patterson, historical and cultural sociologist
- Geoffrey Philp, poet, novelist, playwright
- Velma Pollard, poet, novelist, short story writer
- Patricia Powell, novelist
- Claudia Rankine, poet, playwright
- V. S. Reid, novelist
- Trevor Rhone, playwright and film maker
- Leopold Anthony Richards, scholar, educator, author
- Leone Ross, novelist, short story writer, journalist
- Heather Royes, poet
- Gillian Royes, novelist
- Andrew Salkey, novelist, poet
- Dennis Scott, poet, playwright
- Olive Senior, poet, novelist, short story writer
- Tanya Shirley, poet, scholar
- M. G. Smith, poet
- Mikey Smith, poet
- Ralph Thompson, poet
- Anthony C. Winkler, novelist
- Sylvia Wynter, novelist, dramatist, critic, essayist
- Kerry Young, novelist[6]
See also
References
- ^ Rebecca Tortello, "Pieces of the Past: The Arrival Of The Africans". A Jamaica Gleaner Feature, 3 February 2004.
- ^ Michael Hughes, A Companion to West Indian Literature, Collins, 1979, p. 75.
- ^ Becka’s Buckra Baby is available openly and freely online from the Digital Library of the Caribbean.
- Jamaica Gleaner, 24 May 2014.
- ^ Richard Johnson, "Goodison is poet laureate" Archived 2019-06-02 at the Wayback Machine, Jamaica Observer, 20 March 2017.
- ^ "Kerry Young", Literature British Council.
External links
- Becka’s Buckra Baby from the Digital Library of the Caribbean (1904)
- One Brown Girl and - a Jamaica Story from the Digital Library of the Caribbean (1909)
- Also in the All Jamaica Library, but not written by Thomas MacDermot, Maroon Medicine, by E. A. Dodd (listed as E. Snod) from the Digital Library of the Caribbean