about me

Find me at the UMass Amherst English Department

About my participation in the Innovate@UMass initiative

My book: Citizenship Under Pressure

Find me on Twitter: https://twitter.com/RachelMordecai

sx salon: a small axe literary platform, which I edit

The Journal of West Indian Literature, of which I was an editorial-board member until summer 2019

My “Pulp Caribbean” Pinterest board, where I collect pop-cultural representations of the Caribbean (primarily fiction, movies and television)

 

about things that interest me

Haiti in Translation: exciting new series on the translation of Haitian literature

https://repeatingislands.com/: news and commentary on Caribbean culture, literature, and the arts

African-diasporic popular culture: http://www.blacksuperhero.com/

An online collection of images pertaining to the transAtlantic slave trade: http://slaveryimages.org/

My language and its orthography: http://www.jumieka.com/index.html

Caribbean literary life: http://andrewblackman.net/2012/10/20-best-caribbean-book-blogs/

The Afflicted Yard, some of the most compelling photography from and about Jamaica that I’ve ever seen

Caribbean Commons, where I go to keep up with my field

Yard Edge: a great blog about happenings in Jamaica: http://www.yardedge.net/

Geoffrey Philp’s blog: http://geoffreyphilp.blogspot.com/

H- Caribbean: https://networks.h-net.org/h-caribbean

The Institute of Jamaica

The National Library of Jamaica

The Digital Library of the Caribbean: http://www.dloc.com/

AfroCubaWeb: I haven’t spent much time here yet, but I intend to!

Old-Time Radio (and this series in particular): http://www.digitaldeliftp.com/DigitalDeliToo/dd2jb-Bold-Venture.html

Something I do when I’m not doing academia: spinning yarn

Something else I do when I’m not doing academia: a really good brownie recipe

Where I’m spending my Monday nights these days, learning to be a weaver: Hill Institute Master Weaver program

An excellent Caribbean Studies digital-humanities project organized by Kelly Baker Josephs (to which I had the pleasure of contributing): Keywords for Caribbean Studies

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