Merle Hodge - Further Reading

Further Reading

  • Balutansky, Kathleen. "We are All Activists: An Interview with Merle Hodge", Callaloo 12:4 (Fall 1989), 651-62.
  • Brown, Wayne. "Growing up in Colonial Trinidad." Sunday Guardian (Trinidad), 28 June 1970, pp. 6, 17.
  • Cobham, Rhonda. "Revisioning Our Kumblas: Transforming Feminist and Nationalist Agendas in Three Caribbean Women's Texts", Callaloo 16:1 (Winter 1993), 44- 64.
  • Ghosh, Tannistho, and Basu, Priyanka. "The Two Worlds of the Child: A study of the novels of three West Indian writers; Jamaica Kincaid, Merle Hodge, and George Lamming". June 2002. Retrieved 23 February 2012.
  • Gikandi, Simon. "Narration in the Post-Colonial Moment: Merle Hodge's Crick Crack Monkey." Past the Last Post: Theorizing Post-Colonialism and Post-Modernism, eds. Ian Adam and Helen Tiffin. Hertfordshire: Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1991, 13-22.
  • Harvey, Elizabeth. Review of Crick Crack Monkey, in World Literature Written in English (April 1971), 87.
  • Kemp, Yakini. "Woman and Womanchild: Bonding and Selfhood in Three West Indian Novels", in SAGE: A Scholarly Journal on Black Women, 2:1 (Spring 1985), 24-27.
  • Lawrence, Leota S. "Three West Indian Heroines: An Analysis", in CLA Journal, 21 (December 1977), 238-50.
  • Lawrence, Leota S. "Merle Hodge (1944- )", in Daryl Cumber Dance (ed.), Fifty Caribbean Writers: A Bio-Bibliographical Critical Sourcebook, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1986, pp. 224–228.
  • Thomas, Ena V. "Crick Crack Monkey: A Picaresque Perspective", in Caribbean Women Writers: Essays from the First International Conference, ed. Selwyn Cudjoe. Wellesley: Calaloux, 1990, 209-14.
  • Thorpe, Marjorie. "The Problem of Cultural Identification in Crick Crack Monkey", in Savacou, 13 (Gemini 1977), 31-38.

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