Edward Brathwaite's the Arrivants and the Trope of Cultural Searching (Critical Essay) Edward Brathwaite's the Arrivants and the Trope of Cultural Searching (Critical Essay)

Edward Brathwaite's the Arrivants and the Trope of Cultural Searching (Critical Essay‪)‬

Journal of Pan African Studies 2007, August, 1, 9

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Publisher Description

One major thematic strand runs through the poetry of Edward Brathwaite--this is a quest for identity, an attempt to come to terms with a past that was overwhelming in itself "and still remains overwhelming in its undesirable intrusion into the present" (Romanus Egudu, 1978:8). Brathwaite's main artistic preoccupation is to achieve 'wholeness' through poetic reconstruction. For him, therefore, "the eye must be free/seeing--an attempt to retrieve his world through his poetic vision" (Michael Dash, 1970:122). In fact, the importance of Africa in West Indian writings cannot be overestimated, either as providing alternative metaphors of cultural difference or as a fully developed Negritude. This is in agreement with the assertion of David Richards (1990) and Aderemi Raji-Oyelade (2005). The business of this presentation is to isolate and foreground the motif of Africa in West Indian Literature using Brathwaite's The Arrivants (1981) as a launching pad. We cannot gainsay the fact that the trope of Africa is a recurrent feature of West Indian literature. As Kole Omotoso (1982) rightly observes, African people in the Caribbean suffer two major psychic wounds:

GENRE
Non-Fiction
RELEASED
2007
August 1
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
18
Pages
PUBLISHER
Journal of Pan African Studies
SELLER
The Gale Group, Inc., a Delaware corporation and an affiliate of Cengage Learning, Inc.
SIZE
198.1
KB

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