"Dead Woman Pickney" chronicles life stories of growing up in
Jamaica from 1943 to 1965 and contains both personal experience and
history, told with stridency and humour. The author's coming of age
parallels the political stages of Jamaica's moving from the richest
Crown colony of Great Britain to an independent nation within the
British Commonwealth of Nations.
Taking up the haunting memories of childhood, along with her
astonishment at persistent racial marginalization, both locally and
globally, the author sets out to construct a narrative that at once
explains her own origins in the former slave society of Jamaica and
traces the outsider status of Africa and its peoples. The author's
quest to understand the absence of her mother and her mother's
people from her life is at the heart of this narrative. The title,
"Dead Woman Pickney," is in Jamaican patois, and its meaning
unfolds throughout the narrative. It begins with the author's
childhood question of what a mother is, followed by the realization
of the vulnerability of a child without its mother's protection.
The term "pickney" was the name for slave children on sugar
plantations, and post-emancipation the term was retained for the
descendants of enslaved Africans and the children of black women
fathered by slavers. The author struggles through her life to
discover the identity of her mother in the face of silence from her
father's brutal family.
A wonderful resource for teachers of history, social studies,
cultural studies, and literature, this work could be used as a
starting point to discuss issues of diasporic identities,
colonialism, racism, impact of slavery, and Western imperialism
around the world. It is also an engaging read for those interested
in memoir and life writing.
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