An incredible, informative, collection of essays, oral histories, poetry, fiction, analysis, interviews, primary documents, beautifully illustrated timelines and maps and interactive & interdisciplinary teaching aids on the history, politics, and culture of the Caribbean, as it exists within the U.S. today. Migration from the Caribbean is reshaping the cultural landscape of many American communities. "Moving North" explores this process through fiction, poetry, personal narratives and interviews by women and men of Caribbean background living in the United States. Some came to this country from the Caribbean as adults, while others arrived as children or were born here to parents from the Caribbean. Tracing their roots to Puerto Rico, the English-speaking West Indies, the Dominican Republic, Cuba, Haiti, the writers in "Moving North" bring to life the migration experience and the contributions of Caribbean people to U.S. society today. With all the Teaching For Change publications, this is packed with information for the educator, and those wishing an education, alike.
Catherine A. Sunshine is a writer, editor and translator based in Washington D.C. She edited the previous titles in the Caribbean Connections series published by NECA: "Puerto Rico" (1990), "Jamaica" (1991), and "Overview of Regional History" ( 1991). She is the author of "The Caribbean: Survival, Struggle and Sovereignty" (EPICA/South End Press 1985, 1988), an introduction to Caribbean history and politics.
Keith Q. Warner is professor of modern languages at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia. Born in Trinidad and Tobago, he previously taught at the University of the West Indies in Trinidad and at Howard University in Washington D.C. He is the auth or of "Kaiso! The Trinidad Calypso" (Three Continents Press, 1982), a study of the calypso as oral literature. His most recent book is "And I'll Tell You No Lies" (Calaloux Publications, 1993) a novel of life in Trinidad.