Abstract

Anthurium: A Caribbean Studies Journal includes scholarship on the work of visual artists, commentary on current issues in Caribbean studies and travelogues. Anthurium remains committed to bridging the digital divide by making peer reviewed, scholarly articles and creative writing available to teachers, students, scholars and persons interested in Caribbean literature and culture worldwide without fee based subscriptions. We would like to thank those of you who continue to support refereed, open access academic e-journals such as ours.

Highlights

  • HYPPOLITE: I know that you spent the first two years of your life in England, and the ten in Guyana before returning to England

  • D'AGUIAR: Well, it wasn't something that was totally explained to you as a kid but you would see adults laughing at them, and the way it was sung we'd say hmmm, what's he going on about? we worked it out and realized, my God this is about double meanings this talking about one thing but meaning another

  • It's a great poetic device that later I would deploy in my writing

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Summary

Introduction

HYPPOLITE: I know that you spent the first two years of your life in England, and the ten in Guyana before returning to England. Joanne (2004) "Interview with Fred D'Aguiar," Anthurium: A Caribbean Studies Journal: Vol 2 : Iss. 1 , Article 6. I left the Ph.D. program to write because things were going very well.

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