Overview:
On the Miami E book Truthful, Haitian and Jamaican authors mentioned their intertwined histories, new books, and the necessity for Caribbean solidarity amid environmental and political challenges.
By Béatrice Vallières
Downtown Miami become a stretch of colourful tents this weekend, drawing guide lovers from throughout town for the annual road truthful that closes the Miami E book Truthful, one of many largest literary gatherings within the nation. The forty second version of the occasion, organized and hosted by Miami Dade School, wrapped up Sunday after per week of readings, panels, and performances.
On the ultimate day of the truthful, Haitian and Jamaican literature took middle stage as writers from each nations shared a platform to current their newest books and replicate on the dialogue between their literary traditions. The occasion, titled “Cross-Currents: Haiti, Jamaica, and the Caribbean Imagination – Fiction and Non-Fiction”, introduced collectively Haitian-American authors Edwidge Danticat and Fabienne Josaphat, and Jamaican writers Dwight Thompson and Diana McCauley.
Moderated by journalist Fabian Lyon, the dialogue was a part of the truthful’s ReadCaribbean programming, which all through the week featured panels on Haitian well being, Vodou, and revolutionary figures in literature, in addition to dwell dance and music occasions.
M.J. Fièvre, coordinator of the ReadCarribean program, stated Sunday’s panel grew out of a mirrored image on the deeper ties between Haiti and Jamaica. “There’s at all times been this sense of brotherhood between the 2 nations,” she stated in an interview with The Haitian Instances.
Fièvre pointed to the nations’ historic ties, starting with the Taínos, the Indigenous individuals who inhabited the Caribbean earlier than European colonization, and persevering with by way of their histories of colonization, enslavement, and revolutionary actions.
“Simply as we’ve got rather a lot in frequent, there’s additionally rather a lot that’s so totally different that typically the debates about tradition and historical past are very, very vivid. So I at all times thought it will be fascinating to have a dialog about what makes us the identical and what makes us totally different,” she defined.
And, she added, “this yr was notably fruitful by way of new books coming from each nations.”
Sunday’s panel gave every writer the possibility to introduce and browse from their newest books, in addition to reply viewers questions.

Danticat introduced Watch Out for Falling Iguanas, her newest youngsters’s image guide set in Miami and illustrated by Jamaican illustrator Rachel Moss. Josaphat mentioned her historic fiction, Kingdom of No Tomorrow, which tells the story of a younger Haitian-American lady who joins the Black Panther Occasion within the late Sixties.

Dwight Thompson introduced his second novel, My Personal Pricey Individuals, which explores the theme of poisonous masculinity in Jamaican society by way of the story of a teen haunted by his silence after witnessing an assault. McCauley mentioned A Home for Miss Pauline, her novel set in rural Jamaica, that includes a 99-year-old protagonist reflecting upon her previous and her secrets and techniques.
The latest passage of Hurricane Melissa, which prompted catastrophic harm in Jamaica and led to a number of deaths in Haiti final month, hovered over the dialogue as moderator Fabian Lyon started by acknowledging the storm’s toll in each nations. “Why not come right here and actually discuss our commonalities and the way, going ahead, perhaps we are able to construct a better bond than what we’ve got proper now,” he stated, opening the panel.
Talking with The Haitian Instances, authors emphasised the necessity for solidarity between nations within the wake of environmental disasters and tightening immigration insurance policies that proceed to have an effect on Caribbean immigrants in the US.
“There isn’t that solidarity that’s mandatory for us as Caribbean individuals to actually current ourselves or set up ourselves on the worldwide stage as a united power,” stated Thompson in an interview with the Haitian Instances, pointing to efforts within the Sixties to construct regional unity after Jamaica’s independence.
“The extra we are able to have these conversations, the higher it’s. And literature is a superb ambassador for that,” Edwidge Danticat instructed The Haitian Instances.
Panelists additionally mirrored on the cultural ties and distinctions that form Caribbean identification.
“I feel there may be such a factor as Caribbean-ness, in addition to we’re all very totally different,” McCauley instructed The Haitian Instances.
“The individuals who dwell within the Caribbean have survived. They’ve survived crimes, crimes in opposition to humanity. They’ve survived governments which have allow them to down. They’ve survived hurricanes and earthquakes. A number of tragedy and trauma,” she stated. “And on the finish of it, they nonetheless snort. And that’s Caribbean-ness.”
Haiti’s place throughout the principally English and Spanish-speaking Caribbean can really feel extra sophisticated, Josaphat instructed The Haitian Instances. “And I like that we are actually coming collectively and actually having a dialogue round what our authors are producing and the way our narratives come collectively, the place we converge, the place our similarities are.”



