Jean D'Costa

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Jean D'Costa
BornJean Constance Creary
(1937-01-13) 13 January 1937 (age 87)
Oxford University
GenreChildren's literature
Notable awardsSilver Musgrave Medal (1994)
SpouseDavid D'Costa

Jean Constance D'Costa (born 13 January 1937)[1] is a Jamaican children's novelist, linguist, and professor emeritus. Her novels have been praised for their use of both Jamaican Creole and Standard English.[1]

Early life and education

Jean Constance Creary was born in

Oxford University.[2]

Career

In 1962, after Oxford, she returned to teach Old English and linguistics at University College of the West Indies.[1][2] She also served as a consultant to Jamaica's Ministry of Education on education in Jamaica in the newly independent country, and served on various education committees.[1]

D'Costa continued her creative writing while teaching and consulting. Her two most popular novels, Sprat Morrison (1972) and Escape to Last Man Peak (1976), have been used in schools throughout Jamaica and the Caribbean region.[4] Her novels are geared primarily towards children aged 11 to 13.[1] She researched and wrote extensively on Jamaican creole culture.,[2] and published handbooks for service agencies in Jamaica, including the Kingston office of the United States Peace Corps.

In 1980, D'Costa received a professorship at Hamilton College where she stayed until 1998. She taught Old English, Caribbean literature, creative writing, and linguistics.[2]

Themes

Writing for children on the cusp of teenhood, D'Costa addresses "their need to relate to actuality ... and their need to retain some of the comforting illusions of childhood".[1] To satisfy the latter need, she draws from Jamaican folklore and oral traditions for the plots, themes, and tone of her works. Prominent in Caribbean folklore are "duppy stories", in which ghosts or unsettled spirits return to haunt the land of the living.[3] In her third novel, Voice in the Wind, for example, D'Costa addresses children's perceptions about death and the supernatural.[1] She also references the oral tales that were traditionally told "at wakes and nine-nights".[3] D'Costa paints a vivid picture of historical and contemporary Jamaican countryside.[3]

D'Costa often uses Jamaican Creole for dialogue alongside Standard English.[3] Her use of language, together with her understanding that her works are models for children's own literary attempts, makes her books natural subjects for classroom discussion.[1] Sprat Morrison has been required reading in the "first grade" of Jamaican high schools since 1972, while Escape to Last Man Peak and Voice in the Wind are assigned by many teachers.[1] Students have corresponded with D'Costa and she has accepted invitations to speak in schools.[1] Her works have been lauded for preserving and conveying Jamaican speech rhythms and dialect.[1]

Personal life

D'Costa retired from Hamilton College in 1998, with the title of professor emeritus.[2] She married David D'Costa, a journalist, in 1967.[1] They relocated to Florida in 1997.[5]

Awards and recognition

  • Children's Writers Award (Jamaican Reading Association, 1976)[1]
  • Gertrude Flesh Bristol Award (Hamilton College, 1984)[1]
  • Silver Musgrave Medal (Institute of Jamaica, 1994) for contributions to children's literature and linguistics[4]

Selected works

Novels and short stories

  • Jenny and the General. Carlong. 2006. .
  • Miss Bettina's House. Carlong. 2004.
    Hazel D. Campbell
    )
  • Duppy Tales. Longman. 1997. .
  • Caesar and the Three Robbers. Addison-Wesley Longman. 1996. .
  • Voice in the Wind. Longman Caribbean. 1978. .
  • Escape to Last Man Peak. Longman Caribbean. 1976. .
  • Sprat Morrison. Ministry of Education, Jamaica. 1972. . (2nd edition, 1990)

Anthologies

Books

Linguistic handbooks

References

  1. ^ .
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h "Jean D'Costa". The University of the West Indies. August 2006. Archived from the original on 12 July 2012. Retrieved 21 April 2014.
  3. ^ .
  4. ^ a b "Meet The Authors: Jean D'Costa". Carlong Publishers. Archived from the original on 30 July 2012. Retrieved 21 April 2014.
  5. .

External links