Situating Caribbean Literature & Criticism in Multicultural & Postcolonial Studies is a pioneer in advancing the difficult but necessary argument of situating & centering Caribbean literature & criticism at the foundation of multicultural & postcolonial studies through an interdisciplinary international & intercultural manner made possible by the author's unique multicultural & transnational interest & experience The Caribbean more than any other region has suffered from European imperialism
- annihilation of the native population piracy amongst the European powers deracination & atrocities of the slave trade & subsequent systems of indenture
- but has received the least critical & international attention Situating Caribbean Literature & Criticism in Multicultural & Postcolonial Studies argues that Caribbean criticism
- shaped by the region's socio-economic political & historical phenomena
- has a more complex & significant marriage with postcolonial & multicultural studies than acknowledged by the international community Caribbean scholars should not only seek to legitimize & publicize the marriage & its depth but also expand the borders of its scholarship & protest its "disneyfication" & prostitution