( ISSN 2277 - 9809 (online) ISSN 2348 - 9359 (Print) ) New DOI : 10.32804/IRJMSH

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THE ANTILLES: FRAGMENTS OF EPIC MEMORY. NOBEL LECTURE BY DEREK WALCOTT

    1 Author(s):  SABZAR AHMAD CHOPAN

Vol -  8, Issue- 6 ,         Page(s) : 219 - 226  (2017 ) DOI : https://doi.org/10.32804/IRJMSH

Abstract

The vision of Derek Walcott piñatas his writing. He sees colonial politics for what it is. He is not over Art by western might. As a writer and as a cultural agent Derek Walcott stands on his own feet. He trans fuses the spirit of Caribbean culture in his lecture. The Caribbean culture is like scent it dissolves into atmosphere gives us the smell and gives us pleasure. It is something to be felt. Caribbean people live with the rhythm of nature. They are in tune with life. This is the message of his Nobel lecture. In this research paper his vision , thought content, will be analysed in the light of his Nobel lecture at Stockholm in1992.

  1. WWW.nobelprize.org/nobel-prizes/literature/laureates/1992/walcott.lecture.html.
  2. Walcott, Derek. “ The Caribbean, Culture or Mimicry” (In Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs, Vol16, No.1, Febraury 1974) University of Miami,1974.
  3. Baugh, Edward. The Arkansas testament. In The Art of Walcott. Steward Brown,ed. Chester Spring: Dufour Editions,1991
  4. Dreslin, Paul. Nobody’s Nation: Reading Derek Walcott. Chicago: university Of Chicago Press, 2001
  5. Emery, Mary Lou. Modernism, The Visual And Carribean Literature. Cambridge University Press, 2007
  6. Ismond,Patrica. Abandoning Dead Metaphors: The Caribbean Phase Of Derek Walcott’s Poetry Barbados, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tabago: University of West Indies, 2001

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