"The Purloined Islands" offers the first book-length exploration
of literary and cultural exchanges between the United States and
the Caribbean during the roughly eighty-year period of their
greatest interaction, from the close of the Spanish-American War to
the Cuban Revolution. The interconnected histories of colonization,
migration, slavery, and political struggle thrust writers from both
regions into a vibrant literary conversation across national
borders. Jeff Karem charts this dialogue and its patterns of
influence through an analysis of key literary and cultural sources
in English, French, and Spanish, including a large body of rare
archival evidence.
What the author identifies in this wide-ranging exchange is the
Caribbean's vital contribution not only to the literatures of the
American hemisphere but also to the literary and intellectual
culture of the United States itself. Specifically, he shows how
such movements as pan-Africanism, the New Negro Renaissance, and
pan-American modernism have significant Caribbean roots, although
the United States has often failed to recognize them, effectively
"purloining" those resources without acknowledgment. As his title's
allusion to Poe's "The Purloined Letter" suggests, Karem argues
that the contributions of the Caribbean have been borrowed,
appropriated, and nationalized by U.S. culture but are hidden in
plain sight.
Both its multilingual character and its emphasis on the
reciprocity in cultural cross-currents will make the book of
interest to readers not only in Caribbean and American cultural and
literary studies but also in pan-American or border studies, Black
Atlantic studies, and African American studies.
General
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