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El. knyga: Tropic Tendencies: Rhetoric, Popular Culture, and the Anglophone Caribbean

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"A legacy of slavery, abolition, colonialism, and class struggle has profoundly impacted the people and culture of the Caribbean. In Tropic Tendencies, Kevin Adonis Browne examines the development of an Anglophone Caribbean rhetorical tradition in response to the struggle to make meaning, maintain identity, negotiate across differences, and thrive in light of historical constraints and the need to participate in contemporary global culture"--

A legacy of slavery, abolition, colonialism, and class struggle has profoundly impacted the people and culture of the Caribbean. InTropic Tendencies, Kevin Adonis Browne examines the development of an Anglophone Caribbean rhetorical tradition in response to the struggle to make meaning, maintain identity, negotiate across differences, and thrive in light of historical constraints and the need to participate in contemporary global culture.


A legacy of slavery, abolition, colonialism, and class struggle has profoundly impacted the people and culture of the Caribbean. InTropic Tendencies, Kevin Adonis Browne examines the development of an Anglophone Caribbean rhetorical tradition in response to the struggle to make meaning, maintain identity, negotiate across differences, and thrive in light of historical constraints and the need to participate in contemporary global culture.

Browne bases his study on the concept of the “Caribbean carnivalesque” as the formative ethos driving cultural and rhetorical production in the region and beyond it. He finds that carnivalesque discourse operates as a “continuum of discursive substantiation” that increases the probability of achieving desired outcomes for both the rhetor and the audience. Browne also views the symbolic and material interplay of the masque and its widespread use to amplify efforts of resistance, assertion, and liberation.

Browne analyzes rhetorical modes and strategies in a variety of forms, including music, dance, folklore, performance, sermons, fiction, poetry, photography, and digital media. He introduces chantwells, calypsonians, old talkers, jamettes, stickfighters, badjohns, and others as exemplary purveyors of Caribbean rhetoric and deconstructs their rhetorical displays. From novels by Earl Lovelace, he also extracts thematic references to kalinda, limbo, and dragon dances that demonstrate the author’s claim of an active vernacular sensibility. He then investigates the re-creation and reinvention of the carnivalesque in cyber culture, demonstrating the ways participants both flaunt and defy normative ideas of “Caribbeanness” in online and macro environments.
List of Illustrations
xi
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction: A Jour Ouvert 1(9)
Chapter 1 Mas Rhetorica: A Brief Discourse on the Caribbean Carnivalesque
10(20)
Chapter 2 Structure, Strategy, and Rhetorical Parameters in Caribbean Expression
30(50)
Chapter 3 From the Darker Side of a Schism: Performance and the Prophetic Masque
80(23)
Chapter 4 "We Is People": Earl Lovelace, Ethos, and a Rhetoric of Vernacular Fiction
103(25)
Chapter 5 Inhabiting the Digital Vernacular: The Old Talkers, the Caribloggers, and the Jamettes
128(39)
Conclusion; or, Reprise for the Carnivalesque
155(12)
Notes 167(20)
Bibliography 187(10)
Discography 197(2)
Index 199
Kevin Adonis Browne is assistant professor of writing and rhetoric at Syracuse University, USA.