Already influential in postcolonial, literary, and race studies, the field of Caribbean studies still has much more to offer to contemporary debates throughout the arts and sciences and beyond. This series aims to contribute to these efforts, paying particular attention to the theory of inter-Caribbean Critical Studies; Archipelagic studies and Creolization; Caribbean Aesthetics, Poetry, and Politics; and Caribbean Colonialities.
Focused particularly in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, although attentive to the context of earlier eras, this series encourages interdisciplinary approaches and methods and is open to scholarship in a variety of areas, including diaspora and transnational studies, critical theory and race studies, gender and sexuality studies, sociology, environmental studies, anthropology, history, geography, literary and cultural studies, and popular culture.
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