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← Introduction: New Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Feminicide at the U.S.-Mexico Border
‘Making Eden a Reality’: Caribbean Ecopoetics and Ethnic Environment in Andrea Gunraj’s The Sudden Disappearance of Seetha →

Blood is Money, Blood is Race, Blood is Sex: Using the Vampire to Challenge Sexual Norms in Caribbean Literature

Posted on 01/08/2016 by FIAR Marshall

Giselle Anatol (University of Kansas)

 

This entry was posted in Volume 8.3 and tagged Caribbean, gender, race, sexuality, vampirism. Bookmark the permalink.
← Introduction: New Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Feminicide at the U.S.-Mexico Border
‘Making Eden a Reality’: Caribbean Ecopoetics and Ethnic Environment in Andrea Gunraj’s The Sudden Disappearance of Seetha →
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