At Limbo of Edward Brathwaite, I think there are many ways to see this story. I think that there are many ways to see this story at "Limbo" designed by Limbo Edward Brass Weight. One idea is that this poem is a journey, perhaps a slave ship. This is known for the reference that "Dark deck is slavery". If you are a slave ship and you are a slave, you will be under the lowest deck without light or windows. This will result in almost no light, darkness will be born.
Despite Edward Blasvert's poet "ancestor", its title suggests that it is about our ancestors and their recycling, but the overall structure of poetry is poet's fight and identity problem We will reveal a deep insight into the detailed research of. The center of identity problem is language issue, how it sounds for "others". In this poem, the word also represents one of the ways Brasvert is trying to speak to people in the new world interspersed and scattered.
Critics on early brand work focus on Caribbean countries and cultural identity and Caribbean literary theory. Edward Kamaou Brass Weight, a poet and scholar of Barbados, called the brand "our first asylum poet". Scholar J. Edward Chamberlain called her "The Last Witness of Immigration and Asylum Experience", and its "literary heritage is the true measure of the West Indies, Walcott, Brass Bart and the Others' Legacy". They cited the position of themselves and others, including words and theories.
After explaining the common composition of space, power and language, Hunter delved into the "heresy theory" of Kama Brass Bart. The poem helped to remove the concept of central void space and empowerment. Brathwaite answers Jamaican dialectic by using a compound pronoun (literally, including pidgin-ly) "IandI" for his work. Hunt suggests that "IandI" not only expresses self, multi-intersected self, can not be defined in one direction, or can not contain self, but also groups themselves and connects to others to form self Represent She is talking about "IandI" by Brathwaite as a gesture representing "self that can integrate community ... self ... ...". (Hunt, Leslie Scalapino Lecture)
Theme Variations: Citizen Claudia Rankin: American Lyrics Emily Abendroth, Karen Lepri, Andrea Quaid, Robin Tremblay-McGaw