![]() ![]() The article tracks the ongoing and layered process of memory as palimpsest through which James’s 1963 revised edition of The Black Jacobins is itself constituted. Césaire’s Cahier becomes a crucial new element in James’s rewritten history. ![]() My argument is that these two Caribbean foundation stones are themselves key Caribbean sites of memory in their own right. Both James’s history and Césaire’s poem were rewritten repeatedly over the decades. Examining where memory is crystallized in book form, the article explores the entangled genealogies and rewriting of both key Caribbean works. James’s The Black Jacobins (1938) and Aimé Césaire’s Cahier d’un retour au pays natal (1939) can be important postcolonial lieux de mémoire (sites or realms of memory). This article argues that books such as C.L.R. Read Our Open Access Books and Journals.Publishing Open Access Journal Articles.Writers and Their Work: The Digital Collection.Transnational Modern Languages Digital Collection.Translated Texts for Historians E-Library.Oxford University Studies in the Enlightenment ONLINE. ![]() Opening the Future - Modern Languages Package. ![]()
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