A famous Caribbean writer, Derek Walcott, wrote to understand the destroying heritage of the deep colonial era. Walcott, born in St. Lucia in 1930, has built a history of the Caribbean and a melancholy relationship, forming a way of thinking in the "ocean history". Walcott's application to St. Classic is aimed at changing and restoring the Caribbean identity. Born on the island were former British colonies of the West Indies, a poet and playwright, Derrick Walcott, had a strong interest in writing young people.
Derek Walcott, who won the Nobel Prize, wrote a poem called "Ocean History" (1979), which shows that the sea has not been emptied by history. / Where is the memory of your tribe? Sir, Gray vault room, sea, sea. "As the Walcott wrote, the ocean is a place of mourning that is immersed in the sediments of the sea, from the slavery African body, the dying decline of the anti-colonial struggle, and recently Until the unknown death, the historical level.This is an undocumented history, you can still read in the ocean.
The rich metaphor and explanation of the poems of Derek Walcott made the Caribbean world almost visible: the tropical sea air; the warm beaches; the coastal birds and marine life, and the centuries of European colonies Even after the collapse of the ghost of the principle, there is still what remains. St. Lucia is a Nobel Prize winner who was born and bred and raised in West Indies, from French territory to British territory from the 17th century to the 19th century. Until the late 1950s, Walcott, who was close to 30 years old, just began literature, and the islands did not start to become completely independent of the UK.
Derek Alton Walcott was born in 1930 in a small island in the West Indies, St. Lucia. His parents are middle-class Protestants, which are mainly poor Catholic societies. He studied literature at St. Mary 's University in St. Lucia and the West Indies Archaeological University in Jamaica. For those with two very different ancestors, in English and African, he is often writing an inner struggle. At the age of 18, he funded his first collection of poetry, "25 poems" publications. He wrote the drama and poetry and was awarded Obi for his dream of drama at Monkey Mountain. In 1992, Derek Walcott, who had been waiting for years, was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature and was welcomed as the first great poet of Western Indian culture (Anderson 73)