Evelyn O'Callaghan
Jamaican historian
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History
Evelyn O'Callaghan's Degrees
- PhD History University of Oxford
- Masters History University of the West Indies
- Bachelors History University of the West Indies
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(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Evelyn O'Callaghan is a Jamaican academic who is a professor of West Indian literature at the University of the West Indies. She was the first Jamaican woman to win a Rhodes Scholarship. Biography O'Callaghan was born in Nigeria to parents of Irish descent. She moved to Jamaica as a small child, and attended Mount Alvernia High School in Montego Bay. O'Callaghan completed her undergraduate education at Ireland's University College Cork, which her father had attended. She was Jamaica's Rhodes Scholar for 1978, the first woman to be selected for the honour, and subsequently completed a Master of Letters degree at Wolfson College, Oxford. She later completed a doctorate at the University of the West Indies , with her thesis being supervised by Edward Baugh. O'Callaghan initially worked as a junior lecturer in English literature at the UWI campus in Mona, Jamaica. She transferred to the Cave Hill, Barbados, campus in 1983, and was eventually awarded a full professorship. O'Callaghan is the current dean of the Faculty of Humanities and Education, and has previously served as head of the Department of Language, Linguistics and Literature. She is an editor of the Journal of West Indian Literature, and has written several books about early West Indian women writers.
Evelyn O'Callaghan's Published Works
Published Works
- Woman Version: Theoretical Approaches to West Indian Fiction by Women (1993) (62)
- ‘Jumping into the big ups’ quarrels’: The Hulme/Brathwaite exchange (1998) (38)
- Historical Fiction and Fictional History: Caryl Phillips's Cambridge (1993) (35)
- Caryl Phillips' The Lost Child: A Story of Loss and Connection (2017) (32)
- Women Writing the West Indies, 1804-1939: 'A Hot Place, Belonging To Us' (2003) (29)
- Memories, Dreams and Reflections (2009) (21)
- Anglophone Caribbean Women Writers. (1984) (17)
- Sex, Secrets, and Shani Mootoo’s Queer Families (2012) (7)
- The Modernization of the Trinidadian Landscape in the Novels of Earl Lovelace (1989) (4)
- Views and Visions: layered landscapes in West Indian migrant narratives (2005) (3)
- “Madness Is Rampant on This Island”: Writing Altered States in Anglophone Caribbean Literature (2018) (3)
- “The Unhomely Moment”: Frieda Cassin’s Nineteenth-Century Antiguan Novel and the Construction of the White Creole (2009) (3)
- Play It Back a Next Way: Teaching Brodber Teaching Us (2012) (3)
- Engineering the Female Subject: Erna Brodber's Myal (1990) (2)
- Caribbean Irish connections (2015) (2)
- Caribbean Irish Connections: Interdisciplinary Perspectives (2015) (2)
- Imagined Nations, 50 Years Later (2013) (1)
- Migrant Madness or Poetics of Spirit? Teaching Fiction by Erna Brodber and Kei Miller (2018) (1)
- Madness in Anglophone Caribbean Literature: On the Edge (2018) (1)
- 'It's all about ideology: there's no discussion about art': Reluctant Voyages into Theory in Caribbean Women's Writing (1992) (1)
- Sheer Bliss: A Creole Journey , by Michela A. Calderaro (2022) (0)
- Haunted by Loss: Caryl Phillips's Cambridge and The Lost Child (2015) (0)
- Black Irish, White Jamaican (2018) (0)
- Food, Fiction and Friendship (2021) (0)
- Introduction (2020) (0)
- Elma Napier’s Literary Sense of Place (2015) (0)
- Early Colonial Narratives of the West Indies (2011) (0)
- "What are little girls made of?": Pamela Mordecai's Pink Icing and Other Stories (2008) (0)
- "A hot place belonging to us": constructions of the West Indies in early narratives by women 1804-1939 (2009) (0)
- Caribbean Literature in Transition, 1800–1920 (2020) (0)
- Women writing male marginalization? Oonya Kempadoo's "Tide running" (2006) (0)
- Caribbean Picturesque from William Beckford to Contemporary Tourism (2020) (0)
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