Brathwaite, Edward Kamau - Jean D'Costa (essay date September 1968)
Jean D'Costa (essay date September 1968)
SOURCE: D'Costa, Jean. “Poetry Review.” Jamaica Journal 2, no. 3 (September 1968): 24-8.
[In the following essay, the author compares Brathwaite to Virgil and focuses on themes of exile.]
It is significant that before Brathwaite the poet comes Brathwaite the historian. Only a historian could create so intimately and fully the world of Rights of Passage and Masks. This world is one we know well: that of the negro in the western hemisphere. But while others like Cesaire and Baldwin have treated this world fragment by fragment, Edward Brathwaite attempts a synthesis of a splintered, shattered area of experience, and manages to bind together in a single poetic vision both Louisiana and Brixton, the Golden Stool of the Asante and the slums of Harlem. In Rights of Passage we are shown the panorama in time and space of the exile and wanderings of the negro. In Masks, which...
[The entire page is 3760 words long]
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Criticism
- Jean D'Costa (essay date September 1968)
- Patricia Ismond (essay date September-December 1971)
- Lloyd Wellesley Brown (essay date 1978)
- John Povey (essay date autumn 1987)
- Gordon Rohlehr and E. A. Markham (essay date 1987)
- Simon Gikandi (essay date summer 1991)
- Mary E. Morgan (essay date autumn 1994)
- H. H. Anniah Gowda (essay date autumn 1994)
- Norman Weinstein (essay date autumn 1994)
- Timothy J. Reiss (essay date autumn 1994)
- J. Michael Dash (essay date 1995)
- Mervyn Morris (essay date 1995)
- Silvio Torres-Saillant (essay date 1997)
- Velma Pollard (essay date 2001)
- Mark A. McWatt (essay date 2001)
- Further Reading
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