Showing posts with label Caribbean authors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Caribbean authors. Show all posts
November 19, 2019
Read Caribbean: Miami Book Fair 2019
ReadCaribbean programming features extensive Caribbean-specific events, including readings and panel discussions, storytelling for children, music and more, plus publishers at Street Fair. When appropriate, author events will take place in Creole or French with simultaneous translation into English.
ReadCaribbean se yon bèl pwogram ki selebre tout mèvèy pitit Karayib la reyalize nan domèn kiltirèl e literè. Li òganize deba ak konferans, lekti ak tout kalite aktivite pou timoun, fim ayisyen, dans, mizik, elatriye. Distribitè liv ap pran lari a pou yo pandan Street Fair la. Lè sa apwopriye, prezantasyon ekriven yo ap an kreyòl oswa franse, avèk entèpretasyon similtane nan lang angle.
A very special thank you to Jan Mapou, Myrtha Wroy, Jerry Delince, Cergine Cator, and Sherley Louis members, of Sosyete Koukouy who collaborate with Miami Book Fair on ReadCaribbean programs, including the Little Haiti Book Festival, that takes place annually in May. Established in 1985, Sosyete Koukouy is dedicated to preserving Haitian culture in the United States . Their mission is the preservation, perpetuation and presentation of Haitian cultural performances and exhibitions, to Creole and non-Creole-speaking audiences.
Yon kokennchenn mèsi bay Jan Mapou, Myrtha Wroy, Jerry Delince, Cergine Cator, ak Sherley Louis, ki se manm Sosyete Koukouy e kolaboratè Miami Book Fair nan kad pwogram ReadCaribbean lan, avèk paregzanp Little Haiti Book Festival, ki fèt chak ane nan mwa d me. Depi 1985, Sosyete Koukouy, Inc. ap travay pou prezève kilti ayisyèn nan Ozetazini. Misyon li se prezèvasyon ak pwomosyon kilti peyi Ayiti, e piblik li vize se non sèlman moun ki pale kreyòl, men se moun ki pa pale kreyòl tou.
For more information: https://www.miamibookfair.com/program/readcaribbean-2019/
September 16, 2019
MAKE IT REAL: Writers Clinic With Caribbean Authors
The Louise Bennett-Coverley-Heritage
Council, as part of the centenary celebrations of Jamaica’s cultural icon, the
Honourable Louise Bennett-Coverley, will host a one-day writers clinic - Make it Real- on Saturday,
October 5, 2019, 10:00am– 5:00pm.
The Clinic will be held at
Broward County West Regional Library,
8601 West Broward Boulevard, Plantation, Florida 33324.
Make it Real will help writers take the ideas they’ve been
wanting to write about, shape, polish and breathe life into them so they can
become real stories or poems. Two
workshops, Fiction, and Poetry will be
held concurrently. A third workshop on Performance Poetry will be open to all participants. The sessions will cover: character and plot
development, stage craft and delivery, playing with rhyme and rhythm and
editing for publication.
To celebrate Louise Bennett-Coverley’s
iconic contribution to Caribbean literature, the Writer’s Clinic will be taught
by three outstanding Caribbean writers who live in Florida.
Christine Craig will host the
Poetry clinic. She was born in Jamaica and is a graduate of the University of
the West Indies. Her short stories and poems have been published in British,
American and Caribbean journals. Described as “One of the Caribbean’s most
original and innovative poets” - her poetry collection All Things Bright…and Quadrille for Tigers was published by Peepal
Tree Press, UK. Her short story collection Mint
Tea and other Stories, and children’s fiction Bird Gang, were published by Heinemann Caribbean.
Geoffrey Philp will host the Fiction clinic. He has written two novels, Benjamin, my son and Garvey's Ghost; two
collections of short stories, Who's Your Daddy? and Uncle Obadiah and the Alien, and three
children’s books, Marcus and the Amazons, The Christmas Dutch Pot Baby, and Grandpa Sydney's Anancy Stories. His work is represented in nearly every anthology
of Caribbean literature including the Oxford Book of Caribbean Short
Stories and the Oxford Book of Caribbean Verse.
Malachi Smith is the presenter
of the Performance Poetry clinic. He is a fellow of the University of Miami’s
Michener Caribbean Writer’s Institute, an alumnus of Florida International
University, Miami-Dade College and Jamaica School of Drama. Malachi was a
founding member of Poets in Unity.
He has recorded seven CD collections of his poetry and has read and performed
his poetry internationally.
The writing clinic is sponsored by the Louise Bennett-Heritage
Council, Broward County Public Library, Friends of the South Regional Library
and Friends of the West Regional Library. The Writers Clinic is free and open
to writers in all genres. For
applications email Malachi at malismith@aol.com or log on to www.louisebennettheritage.com
June 3, 2019
St. Martin Book Fair, June 6 - 8, 2019.
Save the date for the 17th annual St. Martin Book Fair [Le Salon du livre de Saint-Martin], which will take place from June 6 to 8, 2019. Stay tuned via House of Nehesi Publishers for more information on the annual theme, guest speakers, and special events related to this international, multilingual and multicultural event.
Announced as “a book fair for the entire family,” the is organized annually by Conscious Lyrics Foundation, the Book Fair Committee, and House of Nehesi Publishers Foundation, in collaboration with St. Maarten Tourist Bureau, University of St. Martin, LC Fleming Foundation.
http://houseofnehesipublish.com/sxm/st-martin-book-fair/
***
March 12, 2019
November 12, 2018
Murder and Mayhem in the Caribbean
MURDER AND MAYHEM IN THE CARIBBEAN – Writers with roots in Cuba, Jamaica, and Trinidad present masterful and unvarnished literary crime fiction and wildly transgressive noir from the Caribbean. With Kevin Jared Hosein, author of The Repenters and The Beast of Kukuyo, Hector Duarte Jr., author of Desperate Times Call, and Nicholas Laughlin, editor of So Many Islands, an anthology of fiction, poetry and essays from Commonwealth small island countries. Moderated by Manny Duran. Find the full schedule at https://mjfievre.com/readcaribbean-2018/
November 5, 2018
Read Caribbean @ Miami Book Fair 2018
ReadCaribbean programming features extensive Caribbean-specific events, including readings and panel discussions, storytelling for children, music and more, plus publishers at Street Fair. When appropriate, author events will take place in Creole or French with simultaneous translation into English.
A very special thank you to Jan Mapou, Myrtha Wroy, Jerry Delince, Cergine Cator, and Sherley Louis members, of Sosyete Koukouy who collaborate with Miami Book Fair on ReadCaribbean programs, including the Little Haiti Book Festival, that takes place annually in May. Established in 1985, Sosyete Koukouy is dedicated to preserving Haitian culture in the United States . Their mission is the preservation, perpetuation and presentation of Haitian cultural performances and exhibitions, to Creole and non-Creole-speaking audiences.
After Irma, After Maria: Caribbean
Women Writing the Storms
Saturday,
November 17 @ 11:30 am
Room 8301
[Building 8, 3rd Floor)
Modern
Caribbean literature captures not just the endemic mismanagement of natural
resources and public projects, but also the enduring chasm between promises of
progress through major infrastructures and the outcomes of natural disasters
for average citizens.
In this
panel, four Caribbean writers reflect on the devastation from Hurricanes Irma
and Maria to many Caribbean islands whose economies rely on tourism; they pay
considerable attention to the Caribbean bodies caught in the crosscurrents of a
catastrophic natural history. With Edwidge Danticat (Haiti), Loretta Collins
Klobah (Puerto Rico), Tiphanie Yanique (Virgin Islands), and Jessica
Pabón-Colón (Puerto Rico).
Unknown Histories of the Caribbean
Saturday,
November 17 @ 1:30 pm
Room 8301
[Building 8, 3rd Floor)
This panel
will discuss how writers from the Caribbean have attempted to construct
alternative images of the present and future from the histories of slavery and
colonialism that haunt the Caribbean and its diasporas. In parallel with these
invented stories, archival registers give unexpected details of the unknown
histories of the Caribbean and allow for scrupulously researched literary works
to emerge alongside tales of imagination.
With Natalie Hopkinson (Guyana),
author of A Mouth is Always Muzzled;
Patrick Bellegarde-Smith (Haiti), author of In
the Shadow of Powers; Dantes Bellegarde in Haitian Social Thought; Michael Barnett (Jamaica), author of The Rastafari Movement: A North American and
Caribbean Perspective, and Judy Raymond (Trinidad), author of The Colour of Shadows. Moderated by
Donna Aza Weir-Soley, author of Eroticism,
Spirituality, and Resistance in Black Women’s Writings.
Murder and Mayhem in the Caribbean
Saturday,
November 17 @ 3:30 pm
Room 8301
[Building 8, 3rd Floor)
Writers
with roots in Dominican Republic, Cuba, and Trinidad and Tobago present
masterful and unvarnished literary crime fiction and wildly transgressive noir
from the Caribbean. With Kevin Jared Hosein, The Repenters and The Beast
of Kukuyo; Hector Duarte Jr., Desperate
Times Call, and Nicholas Laughlin, editor of the anthology, So Many Islands. Moderated by Manny
Duran.
ReadCaribbean Presents Adventures
for Kids
Saturday,
November 17 @ 4:00 pm
Wembly's Author
Tent
Upper plaza
of Children’s Alley
Two friends
search for a long-lost quilt patch in Marjuan Canady’s Callaloo: The Trickster and the Magic Quilt; an Arctic seal tries
to get back home in Joanne C. Hillhouse’s Lost!,
and discoveries abound during a simple walk through the neighborhood in
Paula-Anne Porter Jones’ Sandy, Tosh and
the Moo Cow, and a family’s history comes alive in Francie Latour’s Auntie Luce’s Talking Paintings.
Reading Jamaica
Saturday,
November 17 @ 5:30 pm
Room 8301
[Building 8, 3rd Floor]
Reading
stories that explore such themes as racial identity, gender and sexuality,
family and alienation, exile and history, this panel brings to life the
richness and diversity of writing from and/or about Jamaica. With Marcia
Douglas, author of The Marvellous
Equations of the Dread: A Novel in Bass Riddim, Alecia McKenzie, author of Sweetheart, and Alexia Arthurs, author
of How to Love a Jamaican. Moderated
by Geoffrey Philp, author of Garvey’s
Ghost.
Haitian Identities and Caribbean
Aesthetics/ Idantite Ayisyen Ak Estetik Karibeyen
Sunday,
November 18 @ 11:30 am
Room 8301
[Building 8, 3rd Floor)
In English
with simultaneous interpretation into Haitian Creole
This panel
of four Haitian women writers will address the impact of their Haitian and
Haitian-American identity(ies) on their writing and the ways they navigate
(hyper)visibility and erasure to honor Caribbean aesthetics. Join Marilène
Phipps, author of Unseen Worlds;
Katia D. Ulysse, author of Mouths Don’t
Speak, and Fabienne Josaphat, author of Dancing
in the Baron’s Shadow, as they discuss the ways in which their writings
respond to cultural presumptions about Haitian identity. Moderated by Edwidge
Danticat.
Compelling Stories from the French
Caribbean/Des Histoires Captivantes de la CaraÏbe Française
Sunday,
November 18 @ 1:30 pm
Room 8301
[Building 8, 3rd Floor)
In French
with simultaneous interpretation into English
Writers
from the French Caribbean create and chisel narratives that are vibrant and
compelling as their Caribbean identity shapes and informs the stories they
choose to tell.
This panel
will focus on choices writers make in telling and reporting stories that embody
the depth and breadth of French-Caribbean life and imagination. With Gerty
Dambury (Guadeloupe), author of The
Restless; Mehdi Chalmers (Haiti),
author of À Partir du mensonge; Monique Clesca (Haiti), author of La Confession; and Serge Bilé
(Martinique), author of Yasuké (a
true story about the first recorded Japanese black samurai). Moderated by
Vanessa Selk, Cultural and Education Attaché (Florida and Puerto Rico) of the
Cultural Services of the French Embassy in the United States.
ReadCaribbean Presents Three
Groundbreaking Poets
Sunday,
November 18 @ 1:30 pm
Room 6100
[Building 6, 1st Floor]
Ruth Behar
explores the sacrifices of her exiled Cuban ancestors alongside her own
vulnerabilities in Everything I Kept/Todo
Lo Que Guardé. Loretta Collins Klobah reveals the secret heart of Puerto
Rico in Ricantations, where shiny
modernity gives way to spirit presences before and after Hurricane Maria. I Even Regret Night: Holi Songs of Demerara is
Rajiv Mohabir’s translation of the only known literary work written in 1916 by
an indentured servant in British Guyana.
The Realities of Haitian Migrations
Sunday,
November 18 @ 3:30 pm
Room 8301
[Building 8, 3rd Floor]
In Haitian
Creole with simultaneous interpretation into English
Individuals
who migrate often experience the loss of cultural norms, religious customs, and
social support systems. The adjustment to a new culture brings forth changes in
identity and concept of self. In the case of Haiti, how do these changes affect
the motherland – and the Haitian communities of the Diaspora?
In this
panel, academics and experts in the literary field will speak to the issue of
Haitian migration, racial, gender, and national identity, and ultimately, of
life in the balance. With Pauris Jean-Baptiste (writer), Pierre Buteau
(historian), Inéma Jeudi (journalist), and Claude Charles (ethnologist).
Moderated by Marleine Bastien, Executive Director of FANM
#MeToo Movement in the
Afro-Caribbean Communities
Sunday,
November 18 @ 5:30 pm
Room 8301
(Building 8, 3rd Floor)
In many
African-Caribbean communities, reactions to the #MeToo movement often reflect a
lack of adequate thought about abuse; in fact, these reactions can even indicate
increasing levels of gender-based violence as a norm. Women brave enough to
come out with their ordeals are often silenced or made to face backlash for
their choice to demand justice. Academics and writing professionals will
discuss the blurry lines between abuse and what is considered “normal” gender
relations and “natural”’ male behavior in Haiti and other African-Caribbean
countries, and present ideas on ways that literature can support the women in
impoverished/conflict countries. With Judite Blanc (research psychologist),
Monique Clesca (UN Specialist), Marlene Chouloute-Hyppolite (writer), and
Georges Bossous (human rights activist). Moderated by Anaïse Chavenet (literary
publicist). [In Haitian Creole with simultaneous interpretation into English]
For more
information, please follow this link: https://www.miamibookfair.com/programs/
Image: https://www.islandoriginsmag.com/the-must-see-caribbean-american-authors-for-miami-book-fair/
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