Modernist attributes of C. L. R. James' Minty Alley were born in Trinidad and later placed first in C. L. R. in London and in the USA. James is an important figure in the West Indian literary circles of the 1930s. Today, he is related to his non-literary work in sociology and political science principally, and his novel seems to have been removed from critical attention. Part of my reason for myopic eyesight is that readers in this country can easily see his novel.
James 'Minty Alley of CRL and Janes' Care of Herbert G. Delisser explain the reality women face in society. In his novel, CRL James shows this feminine situation not only through the role of women in the novel but also through the male character showing the male image of the woman as sexual subject. Mr. Benoit and Mrs Rouse's role are examples. Selwyn Reginald Cudjoe and William Cain comment on the novel about the relationship between husband and wife as follows: "Everyone except Maase is dealing with Mrs Rouse's handling by Benoit as very personal slander, depreciation and intimidation (P. Herbert Delisser's Meanwhile, Jane's career, Delisser depicts the situation of Jamaican women through the role of a young woman named Jane, who became a housekeeper in Kingston.
Journal, January 22, 1835. James writes that "ordinary people are resisting each day with their own inventive methods to control their living conditions and relationships with each other". C. L. R. James, Grace C. Lee and Pierre Chaulieu, face-to-face reality (1958; Detroit: Benwick Editions, 1974), page 5. The daily battles of enslaved people to regain some control occur in very "personal" terrain. Their location and use.
In 1962 Grace Lee Boggs, James Boggs, Freddie Payne and Lyman Payne abandoned the politics of C.L.R. James is an eclectic political, third-worldist, while retaining the name of the organization. In 1958, James and Gray Three Boggs and Cornelius Castoriadis pseudonym Pierre Chaulieu wrote a book about the Hungarian working class uprising in 1956, and some members who continued to support James politics were Facing Reality and I was called. The reality is a booklet mainly by Detroit, and monthly magazine Speak Out, and other major Faceing Reality characters such as James and Martin Glaberman. Among them are the American civilization crisis statement in 1964 and Mao Zedong as a dialect, Martin Grabman in 1963, James Marxism and intellectuals, and Lenin, Trotsky and Pioneer in 1964, the black people who are taking the initiative I have an American. In 1967, four key leaders, CLR