JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Wednesday, April 23, 2025

Book Re­view

Book breaks silence of gay and lesbians in Caribbean

by

20120719

Our Caribbean: A gath­er­ing of Les­bian and Gay writ­ing from An­tilles is an eclec­tic com­pendi­um of ab­stract po­et­ry, artis­tic tales and aca­d­e­m­ic com­men­taries on the state of the gay and les­bian com­mu­ni­ty in the Caribbean. Each sto­ry is telling, poignant. The writ­ers bang against walls that have im­pris­oned them-shut­ting them off from the rest of the com­mu­ni­ty.

The aca­d­e­m­ic depth of Wes­ley Chrichlow, in par­tic­u­lar, is near fault­less. In Chart­ing a Buller Man's Trinida­di­an Past, he chron­i­cles life as a young man nur­tured in an an­ti-gay cli­mate. He em­ploys the so­ci­o­log­i­cal the­o­ries of no­table lu­mi­nar­ies-W E B Dubois, Hen­ry Louis Gates and Mar­lon Rig­gs; and no­table gay writer Au­dre Lorde. In many ways Chrichlow's work forms the crux of this fas­ci­nat­ing and nov­el un­der­tak­ing, en­cap­su­lat­ing the writ­ers' re­sent­ments and frus­tra­tion in a world alien, even hos­tile. His work of­fers a dis­turb­ing snap­shot-a psy­cho­log­i­cal and so­ci­o­log­i­cal overview of life as a gay youth. It is a bi­na­ry ex­is­tence-one of near para­noia that the writer calls, "dou­ble con­scious­ness," or look­ing at one­self through the eyes of oth­ers.

Chrichlow's pain rings through. He ob­serves, if not re­viles the ef­fem­i­nate ho­mo­sex­u­al, the queer-the vil­lage clown who serves up gos­sip and comedic an­tics. He re­calls play­ing his cards right-to mask his sex­u­al­i­ty: "Dur­ing my teenage life, in an ef­fort to tem­porar­i­ly se­cure my mas­culin­i­ty...I par­tic­i­pat­ed in events such as steal­ing (sug­ar cane, co­coa, man­goes...) break­ing bot­tles with sling­shots or stones..., en­gag­ing in phys­i­cal fights, and hang­ing out on the block with the boys late at night." He even ca­vort­ed with women, if on­ly to probe in­to his sex­u­al­i­ty. Chrichlow, like so many of the writ­ers is up against a so­ci­ety that is en­trenched in ho­mo­pho­bia. It is pro­mul­gat­ed by the every in­sti­tu­tion and sanc­tioned by re­li­gious edicts. But les­bians and gays make up a sec­tor that should not be si­lenced. Un­for­tu­nate­ly, in post colo­nial so­ci­eties, iden­ti­ty crises have for­mu­lat­ed a cul­tur­al zeit­geist based on machis­mo, po­lit­i­cal strong­men and the viril­i­ty of the black man. While the Caribbean has sought, through rev­o­lu­tions, to com­bat racism, sex­ism and clas­sism, it has failed to dis­man­tle het­ero­sex­ist views. As Chrichlow ar­gues, the Black Pow­er move­ment-while ef­fect­ing pos­i­tive change on one hand-has served to re­in­force the stig­ma­ti­sa­tion of the ho­mo­sex­u­al. In rev­o­lu­tion­ary Cu­ba, as Ma­bel Cues­ta ar­tic­u­lates in Oth­er is­landers on Les­bos: A Ret­ro­spec­tive Look at His­to­ry of Les­bians in Cu­ba, gar­zon­is­mo (les­bian­ism) is a ghost­ly sub­ject, di­vorced or un­wel­come in any dis­course on women of the rev­o­lu­tion as the writ­ings of famed ac­tivist Mari­blan­ca Sabas Alo­ma sad­ly in­di­cate.

But Our Caribbean is not all laden with so­ci­o­log­i­cal find­ings. Tales of un­in­hib­it­ed li­bido race through its pages, cour­tesy of Pe­dro Je­sus. His The Por­trait, is a haunt­ing­ly provoca­tive ex­hib­it of raw sex that pours from the imag­i­na­tion of the pro­tag­o­nist on­to her can­vas, and in­to her bed. It is a sex­u­al con­ta­gion that de­stroys friend­ships and sad­ly plays in­to the stereo­typ­i­cal view of the pruri­ent, las­civ­i­ous ho­mo­sex­u­al. Ar­guably, it goes against the over­all the­mat­ic grain-but at the same time pro­vides the most cin­e­mato­graph­ic and lit­er­ary artis­tic un­der­tak­ing. Through­out, there is an acute sense of pes­simism and dis­trust of the so-called het­ero­sex­ist es­tab­lish­ment. Non gays and les­bians are scru­ti­nised, even sub­ject to re­verse "dis­crim­i­na­tion." This is best ex­em­pli­fied in Cues­ta's work that de­scribes male at­ten­tive­ness as sus­pi­cious. She writes of her ex­pe­ri­ence build­ing a small house with her part­ner: "Young men blos­somed from every cor­ner, hand­some, very strong.....ma­cho, prob­a­bly promis­cu­ous, prob­a­bly abusers too."

Maybe, they fan­ta­sised about girl on girl sex, she sur­mised. Ad­mit­ted­ly, her tone is far less crest­fall­en at the end.

Of course, the skit­tish, tim­o­rous at­ti­tude of some gay and les­bians is un­der­stand­able, but, as Al­do Alavarez proves in Prop­er­ty Val­ues, for every ven­omous ho­mo­phobe, there are many het­ero­sex­u­als will­ing to fight for so­cial equa­nim­i­ty-or all. Our Caribbean-al­though part­ly con­tex­tu­al, is an es­sen­tial re­source for lay and aca­d­e­m­ic com­mu­ni­ties. It is of­fers a panora­ma of rag­ing bio-psy­cho­log­i­cal forces, while con­jur­ing ques­tions on cre­ation and man's pro­cliv­i­ty to vi­o­late, in­jure, and even kill an­oth­er sole­ly be­cause of sex­u­al ori­en­ta­tion.

Our Caribbean:

A gath­er­ing of Les­bian and Gay Writ­ing From the An­tilles

• Edit­ed with an In­tro­duc­tion by Thomas Glave

• Duke Uni­ver­si­ty Press

• Durham and Lon­don 2008

• Avail­able: Ama­zon.com

• Rat­ings: *** (rec­om­mend­ed)


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored