Jamaica Kincaid
BornElaine Cynthia Potter Richardson
(1949-05-25) May 25, 1949 (age 75)
St. John's, Antigua
NationalityAntiguan
EducationFranconia College
GenreFiction, memoir, essays
Notable works
Spouse
(m. 1979; div. 2002)
Children2

Jamaica Kincaid (/kɪnˈkd/; born May 25, 1949)[1] is an Antiguan-American novelist, essayist, gardener, and gardening writer. She was born in St. John's, Antigua, which is part of the twin-island nation of Antigua and Barbuda. She lives in North Bennington, Vermont, during the summers and teaches at Harvard as the "Professor of African and African American studies in Residence" at Harvard during the academic year.[2]

Biography

Early life

Jamaica Kincaid was born Elaine Potter Richardson in St. John's, Antigua, in 1949.[3] She grew up in relative poverty with her mother, a literate, cultured woman and home-maker, and her stepfather, a carpenter.[4][3][5][6] She was very close to her mother until the first of her three brothers were born in quick succession when she was nine years old. After their births, Kincaid felt that she was neglected by her mother, who thereafter focused primarily on the needs of her younger brothers. Kincaid later recalled, “our family money remained the same, but there were more people to feed and to clothe, and so everything got sort of shortened, not only material things but emotional things. The good emotional things, I got a short end of that. But then I got more of things I didn't have, like a certain kind of cruelty and neglect.”[5] In a New York Times interview, Kincaid also said that “The way I became a writer was that my mother wrote my life for me and told it to me.”[6]

Kincaid was educated in the British colonial education system, as Antigua did not gain its independence from England until 1981.[3][5][7] Although she was intelligent and frequently tested at the top of her class, her mother removed Kincaid from school at age sixteen to help support the family when her third and last brother was born because her stepfather was ill and could not provide for the family any more.[5] In 1966, her mother sent her to Scarsdale, an upper-class suburb of New York City, when she was only seventeen, to work as an au pair.[8] However, after this move, Kincaid refused to send money home. Additionally, "she left no forwarding address and was cut off from her family until her return to Antigua 20 years later.”[9]

Family

In 1979, Kincaid married the composer and Bennington College professor, Allen Shawn, son of The New Yorker's longtime editor William Shawn and brother of actor Wallace Shawn. They divorced in 2002. They have two children: a son, Harold who is the music producer/songwriter Levelsoundz, and a daughter, the singer/songwriter Annie Rosamond. Kincaid is the President of the Levelsoundz fan club, which is the official fan club for her son Harold Shawn.

Kincaid is a keen gardener who has written extensively on the subject. She is also a convert to Judaism.[10]

Career overview

While working as an au pair, Kincaid enrolled in evening classes at a community college.[11] After three years, she resigned from her job to attend Franconia College in New Hampshire on a full scholarship. However, Kincaid dropped out of school after one year and returned to New York.[3] In New York City, she started writing for a teenage girls' magazine and changed her name to Jamaica Kincaid in 1973 when her writing was first published.[12] She described changing her name as "a way for [her] to do things without being the same person who couldn't do them—the same person who had all these weights".[7] On her choice of first and last name, Kincaid explained that Jamaica is an English corruption of what Columbus called Xaymaca as well as it is the part of the world that she is from and Kincaid appeared to go well with Jamaica.[13] Kincaid became a writer for The Village Voice and Ingénue. Kincaid's short fiction appeared in The Paris Review and The New Yorker, where her novel Lucy was originally serialized.[14] Kincaid is an award-winning writer whose work has been both praised and criticized for its subject matter because her writing largely draws upon her own life and her tone is often perceived as angry.[11] In response, Kincaid counters that many writers also draw upon personal experience, and thus to describe her writing as autobiographical and angry is not valid criticism.[4]

The New Yorker

As a result of her budding writing career and friendship with George W. S. Trow, who wrote many pieces for The New Yorker column "The Talk of the Town",[3] Kincaid became acquainted with The New Yorker's legendary editor, William Shawn, who was impressed with Kincaid's writing.[11] He employed her as a staff writer in 1976 and then eventually as a featured columnist for "Talk of the Town", which lasted nine years.[11] William Shawn's tutelage legitimized Kincaid as a writer and proved pivotal to her development of voice. In all, she was a staff writer for The New Yorker for twenty years.[8] She resigned from The New Yorker in 1996 when the editor Tina Brown chose actress Roseanne Barr to guest-edit an issue as an original feminist voice. Even though circulation rose under Brown, Kincaid was critical of Brown's direction in making the magazine less literary and more celebrity-oriented.[15]

Kincaid recalls that when she was a writer for The New Yorker, she would often be questioned, particularly by women, on how she was able to obtain her position. Kincaid felt that these questions were posed to her because she was a young black woman "from nowhere...I have no credentials. I have no money. I literally come from a poor place. I was a servant. I dropped out of college. The next thing you know I'm writing for The New Yorker, I have this sort of life, and it must seem annoying to people."[4]

Talk Stories was later published in 2001 as a collection of “77 short pieces Kincaid wrote for The New Yorker's ‘Talk of the Town’ column between 1974 and 1983”.[16]

Writing

Her novels are loosely autobiographical, though Kincaid has warned against interpreting their autobiographical elements too literally: "Everything I say is true, and everything I say is not true. You couldn't admit any of it to a court of law. It would not be good evidence."[17] Her work often prioritizes "impressions and feelings over plot development"[6] and features conflict with both a strong maternal figure and colonial and neocolonial influences.[18] Excerpts from her non-fiction book A Small Place were used as part of the narrative for Stephanie Black's 2001 documentary, Life and Debt.[19]

One of Kincaid's contributions according to Henry Louis Gates, Jr., African-American literary critic, scholar, writer, and public intellectual, is that:

She never feels the necessity of claiming the existence of a black world or a female sensibility. She assumes them both. I think it's a distinct departure that she's making, and I think that more and more black American writers will assume their world the way that she does. So that we can get beyond the large theme of racism and get to the deeper themes of how black people love and cry and live and die. Which, after all, is what art is all about.[20]

Themes

Her writing explores such themes as colonialism and colonial legacy, postcolonialism and neo-colonialism, gender and sexuality, renaming,[13] mother-daughter relationships, British and American imperialism, colonial education, writing, racism, class, power, and adolescence. In her most recent novel, See Now Then, Kincaid also first explores the theme of time.[4]

Tone and style

Her writing has been criticized.[3] As works such as At the Bottom of the River and The Autobiography of My Mother use Antiguan cultural practices, some critics say these works employ “magical realism”. “The author claims, however, that [her work] is ‘magic’ and ‘real,’ but not necessarily [works] of ‘magical realism.’” Other critics claim that her style is “modernist” because much of her fiction is "culturally specific and experimental".[21] It has also been praised for its keen observation of character, curtness, wit,[5] and lyrical quality.[11] Derek Walcott, 1992 Nobel laureate, described Kincaid's writing: "As she writes a sentence, psychologically, its temperature is that it heads toward its own contradiction. It's as if the sentence is discovering itself, discovering how it feels. And that is astonishing, because it's one thing to be able to write a good declarative sentence; it's another thing to catch the temperature of the narrator, the narrator's feeling. And that's universal, and not provincial in any way".[20] Susan Sontag has also commended Kincaid's writing for its "emotional truthfulness," poignancy, and complexity.[7]

Influences

Kincaid's writing is largely influenced by her life circumstances even though she discourages readers from taking her fiction too literally.[5] To do so, according to the writer Michael Arlen, is to be "disrespectful of a fiction writer's ability to create fictional characters". Arlen, who would become a colleague at The New Yorker, is whom Kincaid worked for as an au pair and the figure whom the father in Lucy is based on. Despite her caution to readers, Kincaid has also said that: "I would never say I wouldn't write about an experience I've had."[7]

Criticism

Writing in Salon.com, Peter Kurth called Kincaid's work My Brother the most overrated book of 1997.[22]

Reviewing her latest novel, See Now Then in The New York Times, Dwight Garner called it “bipolar," “half séance, half ambush” and “the kind of lumpy exorcism that many writers would have composed and then allowed to remain unpublished. It picks up no moral weight as it rolls along. It asks little of us, and gives little in return.”[23]

List of works

Novels
Uncollected fiction
Short story collections
Non-fiction books
Uncollected non-fiction
Children's literature

Interviews

Awards and honors

References

  1. ^ Farrior, Angela D. "Writers of the Caribbean - Jamaica Kincaid". Core.ecu.edu. Retrieved November 18, 2017.
  2. ^ "Jamaica Kincaid - Harvard University Department of English". English.fas.harvard.edu. Retrieved November 18, 2017.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "Kincaid, Jamaica – Postcolonial Studies". Scholarblogs.emory.edu. Retrieved November 18, 2017.
  4. ^ a b c d "Jamaica Kincaid: People say I'm angry because I'm black and I'm a woman". Salon.com. May 5, 2013. Retrieved November 18, 2017.
  5. ^ a b c d e f "Her Story - BBC World Service". Bbc.co.uk. Retrieved November 18, 2017.
  6. ^ a b c [1] Archived March 3, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ a b c d Garis, Leslie (October 7, 1990). "Through West Indian Eyes". New York Times Magazine. Retrieved June 18, 2013.
  8. ^ a b Levintova, Hannah. ""Our Sassy Black Friend" Jamaica Kincaid". MotherJones (January/February 2013). Retrieved June 25, 2013.
  9. ^ "Jamaica Kincaid facts, information, pictures - Encyclopedia.com articles about Jamaica Kincaid". Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved November 18, 2017.
  10. ^ Halper, D. "Black Jews: A Minority Within a Minority". Ujc.org. Archived from the original on February 28, 2009. Retrieved August 3, 2010. ((cite web)): Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  11. ^ a b c d e M., Benson, Kristin; Cayce, Hagseth, (November 18, 2017). "Jamaica Kincaid". Conservancy.umn.edu. Retrieved November 18, 2017.((cite journal)): CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  12. ^ "Jamaica Kincaid". Eng.fju.edu.tw. Retrieved November 18, 2017.
  13. ^ a b Sander, R. "Review of Diane Simmons, Jamaica Kincaid". Caribbean Writer: the Literary Gem of the Caribbean. University of the Virgin Islands. Retrieved June 25, 2013.
  14. ^ "Jamaica Kincaid". Litencyc.com. Retrieved November 18, 2017.
  15. ^ Lee, Felicia R. (January 25, 1996). "AT HOME WITH: Jamaica Kincaid;Dark Words, Light Being". The New York Times. Retrieved June 25, 2013.
  16. ^ "Review - Talk Stories by Jamaica Kincaid". Januarymagazine.com. Retrieved November 18, 2017.
  17. ^ "The Missouri Review". Missourireview.com. Retrieved November 18, 2017.
  18. ^ Jamaica Kincaid. (n.d.). Columbia Guide to Contemporary African American Fiction. Literary Resource Center. Retrieved June 2014
  19. ^ "About the film". Life and Debt. Retrieved May 17, 2013.
  20. ^ a b Garis, Leslie (October 7, 1990). "Through West Indian Eyes". New York Times Magazine. ((cite journal)): |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  21. ^ Frederick, R. D. (2000). Jamaica Kincaid. Columbia Companion to the Twentieth-Century American, p.314-319. Retrieved October 21, 2015
  22. ^ Garner, Dwight. "The worst books of 1997". Retrieved November 8, 2015.
  23. ^ Garner, Dwight (February 12, 2013). "'See Now Then,' Jamaica Kincaid's New Novel". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved November 8, 2015.
  24. ^ Lee, F.R. (February 5, 2013). Never Mind the Parallels, Don’t Read It as My Life. The New York Times, C1. Print.
  25. ^ a b "Jamaica Kincaid". Literature Matters: Writers. British Council. Retrieved June 25, 2013.
  26. ^ "Jamaica Kincaid". Fellowships to Assist Research and Artistic Creation. John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved June 14, 2013.
  27. ^ a b "Jamaica Kincaid". Tufts Now. Tufts University. Retrieved June 14, 2013.
  28. ^ "Book Trade Announcements - Jamaica Kincaid Winner Of Center For Fiction's Clifton Fadiman Award". Booktrade.info. Retrieved November 18, 2017.
  29. ^ ""Before Columbus Foundation Announces the Winners of the 35th Annual American Book Awards", August 18, 2014" (PDF). Beforecolumbusfoundation.com. Retrieved November 18, 2017.
  30. ^ Cassidy, Thomas. "Jamaica Kincaid." Critical Survey of Long Fiction. Literary Resource Center. Web.
  31. ^ "JAMAICA KINCAID". Dandavidprize.org. Retrieved November 18, 2017.

Sources