"Introducing an innovative theoretical framing of long-standing critical debates about history, biography, archive, and belonging, this lucid study of Caribbean women’s life-writing points to their remarkable contributions to new modes of knowledge production about the past and its aporias. Stitt’s analyses of the writers’ imaginative formal strategies are a timely and valuable intervention in Caribbean and Gender Studies."
~Françoise Lionnet, author of Writing Women and Critical Dialogues: Subjectivity, Gender, and Irony
"In Dreams of Archives Unfolded, Jocelyn Stitt answers the 'Caribbean quarrel with history' by convincingly arguing for the place of contemporary Caribbean women's memoir, from across its diasporas and linguistic schisms, as integral to the constitution of our archives, past and future. A well-argued work which will open new vistas for scholars of women's life-writing and Caribbean studies in the, hoped for, decolonial future."
~Myriam J. A. Chancy, author of Autochthonomies: Transnationalism, Testimony, and Transmission in the African Diaspora
"A text that connects the work of life writing by Caribbean women with alternative routes to and through history and memory in ways that affirm the power and reach of life writing as works of witness, realizing the dream of creating a livable past that archives themselves cannot unfold. As lifewriting studies continues to grapple with the ethics and aesthetics of witnessing, Stitt’s book constitutes an important intervention, because it values the work of nonfiction as evidence, feeling, and response to what must always remain incomplete."
~Julie Rak, Biography: An Interdisciplinary Quarterly