Scott, JamieTaylor, PatrickCooper-Clark, DianaHaasen, Hendrika Elizabet Maria2022-03-032022-03-032021-092022-03-03http://hdl.handle.net/10315/39070Negro Slavery Described by a Negro: Being the Narrative of Ashton Warner (1831), Shake Keanes The Angel Horn (2005) and H. Nigel Thomass Spirits in the Dark (1993) witness to the communities and individuals who have resisted colonialism in St. Vincent. Frantz Fanon and Stuart Hall shape the analysis of how these works demonstrate that the degradation of human beings by the imperial project is overturned by the creole culture that very undertaking has made possible. Warner testifies to the use of the British legal and political systems in support of an African derived selfhood. The Angel Horn creates solidarity with the plight of Vincentians and promises renewal through the creolization of Indigenous and non-native cultures. Spirits in the Dark appropriates syncretic religious rites to redress the alienation of a modern queer Black Caribbean. Vincentian testimonies to the creation of agency out of the cultural shards of colonialism result.Author owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests.Black studiesHummingbird oil she breast: Testimony and Resistance in Vincentian Redemption SongsElectronic Thesis or Dissertation2022-03-03Caribbean slave narrativeVincentian poetryQueer Caribbean novelAshton WarnerShake KeaneSpirits in the DarkH. Nigel ThomasRepresentation of Black Caribs/GarifunaVincentian identityTestimony in Vincentian culturePresence of the Spritiual Baptist religion in Caribbean novel"ROUNDTRIP""Kaiso Kaiso"St. Vincent and the Grenadines