Frank Birbalsingh

The contextualisation in the Caribbean political and economic struggles lays bare the underlying animosities, the sense of community and the manifestation of ethnicities—all of which form a complex conflictual background to the fresh migrations and identity formations. Creolisation vs hybridity, sense of a new nationhood contrasted with the anguish of separation, the power struggles between powerful majorities and ‘recalcitrant’ minorities, the hospitality and the hostility of recipient societies which surface in Bissoondath’s work are analysed and elaborated upon in the context of his Caribbean heritage.
The work forms a significant contribution to the series primarily because it problematises the struggles of the third or fourth generations of emigrants, who are compelled to move again towards a fresh sense of dislocation and a fresh struggle for acceptance.
Frank Birbalsingh is Professor Emeritus of English at York University in Toronto, Canada. His publications include Passion and Exile: Essays in Caribbean Literature (1988), Frontiers of Caribbean Literature (1996), The Rise of West Indian Cricket (1996), Novels and the Nation (1995) and Guyana and the Caribbean (2004). A pioneering scholar in Caribbean studies, he has edited the ground-breaking collection of studies Indenture and Exile and Indo-Caribbean Resistance and the two anthologies Jahaji Bhai and Jahaji.
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