Dutch Caribbean Women’s Literary Thought: Activism through Linguistic and Cosmopolitan Multiplicity
In a select group of works by late 20th and early 21 st century Curaçaoan women novelists and poets such as Nydia Ecury (1926- 2012), Diana Lebacs (b.1947), Myra Römer (b.1946), Aliefka Bijlsma (b.1971), and Mishenu Osepa-Cicilia (b.1978), we see through what is often an autobiographical subjectivity, a “transnational collective plurality and difference†that describes the empowering physical and psychological possibilities that come with cross-national travel, immigration, cosmopolitanism, and linguistic multiplicity. This paper will present the politics of Curaçaoan-Dutch Caribbean wom... Mehr ...
Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Dokumenttyp: | Text |
Erscheinungsdatum: | 2017 |
Verlag/Hrsg.: |
Digital Commons @ Cortland
|
Schlagwörter: | feminism / gender equity / social justice / ethnographic studies / Curaçao / immigration / cosmopolitanism / linguistic multiplicity |
Sprache: | unknown |
Permalink: | https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-29019862 |
Datenquelle: | BASE; Originalkatalog |
Powered By: | BASE |
Link(s) : | https://digitalcommons.cortland.edu/wagadu/vol18/iss1/8 |
In a select group of works by late 20th and early 21 st century Curaçaoan women novelists and poets such as Nydia Ecury (1926- 2012), Diana Lebacs (b.1947), Myra Römer (b.1946), Aliefka Bijlsma (b.1971), and Mishenu Osepa-Cicilia (b.1978), we see through what is often an autobiographical subjectivity, a “transnational collective plurality and difference†that describes the empowering physical and psychological possibilities that come with cross-national travel, immigration, cosmopolitanism, and linguistic multiplicity. This paper will present the politics of Curaçaoan-Dutch Caribbean women’s cosmopolitanism and linguistic multiplicity as transformative tools for personal and collective agency and activism for autonomy.