Small Axe 77  – Repeating Islands

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    Small Axe 77 (July 2025) is now available. Angel Otero’s abstract work “Prose” is featured on the cover and in the visual essay. 

    Small Axe 77 includes essays by Carlos Garrido Castellano, C.C. McKee, Gabriel Arce Riocabo and Anna Forné, F. Joseph Sepúlveda Ortiz, and Lyndon Gill. This issue includes the fourth iteration of our Keywords in Caribbean Studiesfocused on the term “Heritage” and explored by Alyssa A. L. James, Ayana Omilade Flewellen, Khadene Harris, and Nadia Mosquera Muriel. This issue features the special section Reflections on Gordon Rohlehr and includes essays by Maureen Warner-Lewis and Hannah Regis. [. . .] The issue closes with a book discussion of Lorgia García Peña’s Translating Blackness: Latinx Colonialities in Global Perspective with essays by Marisel Moreno and Elizabeth S. Manley, and a response essay by the author.

    Contents

    Preface: Is There a Moral and Political History of the Jamaican Left? David Scott

    What Is the Contemporary in Contemporary Caribbean Art? Carlos Garrido Castellano

    Squaring the Circle: The Violence of Environmental Form in the Colonial Caribbean, C. C. McKee

     Rara avis: Lengua de Pájaro de Nancy Morejón en los sesenta cubanos, Gabriel Arce Riocabo and Anna Forné

    Queer Diasporic Imaginaries in Ana-Maurine Lara’s Erzulie’s Skirt, F. Joseph Sepúlveda Ortiz

    Grace Against Time:  AIDS Spirit Work and the Trinidad and Tobago Memorial Quilt, Lyndon Gill

    Keywords in Caribbean Studies: Heritage

    Tending to the Future, Alyssa James

    The Politics of Heritage in the USVI: Reclaiming Afro-Caribbean Histories, Ayana Omilade Flewellen

    A Heritage from Below, Khadene Harris

    Abolengo Treads: Afro-Venezuelan Heritage and Afro-Cuban Spiritual Traditions, Nadia Mosquera Muriel

    Remembering Gordon Rohlehr, Bookman

    Words to Treasure, Maureen Warner-Lewis

    Gordon Rohlehr: Context, Commitment, Legacy, Hannah Regis

    Visualities

    Prose, Angel Otero

    Book Discussion: Lorgia García Peña, Translating Blackness: Latinx Colonialities in Global Perspective

    The Radical Hope of Translating Blackness, Marisel Moreno

    A “Rich, Unexplored Field”? Race, Empire, Elision, and Belonging in Early Caribbean Studies, Elizabeth S. Manley

    Some Thoughts on Translating Blackness, Lorgia García Peña

    For more information, see https://smallaxe.net/sx/issues/77

    Also see https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1ECnp3fZ3Z/?mibextid=wwXIfr



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