Results 181 to 190 of about 5,773,785 (251)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Anglophone Caribbean Children’s Literature:
2023This chapter reviews the transition in children’s literature after the 1960s from colonialist to postcolonialist content as a framework for understanding contemporary Anglophone Caribbean children’s literature. Local voices integrated folklore into curricular material beginning in the 1930s, with far more expansive output after 1960.
openaire +1 more source
Journal of Cleaner Production, 2021
In recent decades, information and communication technology (ICT) has revolutionized the world affecting every aspect of life, including education, business, social activities, and environment.
Zahoor Ahmed, S. Nathaniel, M. Shahbaz
semanticscholar +1 more source
In recent decades, information and communication technology (ICT) has revolutionized the world affecting every aspect of life, including education, business, social activities, and environment.
Zahoor Ahmed, S. Nathaniel, M. Shahbaz
semanticscholar +1 more source
The Tourist Review, 2023
Purpose This paper aims to provide a comparative analysis of sustainable tourism development across the Anglophone Caribbean region from the post-independence period of 1962 to the 2020s.
A. Spencer +5 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Purpose This paper aims to provide a comparative analysis of sustainable tourism development across the Anglophone Caribbean region from the post-independence period of 1962 to the 2020s.
A. Spencer +5 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Translation in Caribbean Literature
Small Axe: A Caribbean Journal of Criticism, 2020This essay weaves together translation and postcolonial literary studies to propose a translational model of reading for Caribbean literature. Translation and creolization provide the conceptual and aesthetic lens for reading Caribbean literary texts: If translation is an apt model, since it captures languages in transit toward other languages and ...
openaire +1 more source
Publishing Children’s Literature in the Caribbean
2023Four Caribbean authors of children’s literature—Diane Browne, María Teresa Marichal-Lugo, Ada Haiman, and Joanne Gail Johnson—engage in conversation regarding the publishing experience within the Caribbean. All women, these writers reflect on composing original stories for a specific young audience. Their work spans the end of the twentieth century and
Betsy Nies, Melissa García Vega
openaire +1 more source
African, Caribbean, and Canadian Literature
The Year's Work in English Studies, 1985This chapter represents a first stage in the progress towards a fully comprehensive critical survey of books and articles on Commonwealth literatures. Three countries are represented this year, with sections covering books and articles on African and Caribbean literatures, and a third section treating the main Canadian periodicals.
J. BOOTH, S. NASTA, O. KNOWLES
openaire +1 more source
Innovation and R&D in Latin America and the Caribbean countries: a systematic literature review
Scientometrics, 2020Marco Túlio Dinali Viglioni +2 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Caribbean and Southern Literatures
2017Transnationalism and Global Studies have exploded old notions of artificial cultural boundaries, opening to view the myriad cross currents between the U.S. South and the Caribbean. Thus, the literature produced by the wider region of the circumCaribbean can be considered to reflect this interplay and as an alternative history to chronicles bounded by ...
openaire +1 more source

