Sylvia Wynter
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Sylvia Wynter,
O.J. OJ may refer to: * Orange juice People In American football * O. J. Simpson (1947–2024), American football player, broadcaster, actor, and convicted felon * Ottis Anderson, Ottis Jerome "O.J." Anderson (born 1957), American football playe ...
(
Holguín Holguín (, ) is a municipality-city in Cuba. After Havana, Santiago de Cuba, and Camagüey, it is the List of cities in Cuba, fourth largest city in Cuba. History Before Christopher Columbus, Columbus, the Taino people settled in huts made fro ...
, Cuba, 11 May 1928) is a
Jamaica Jamaica is an island country in the Caribbean Sea and the West Indies. At , it is the third-largest island—after Cuba and Hispaniola—of the Greater Antilles and the Caribbean. Jamaica lies about south of Cuba, west of Hispaniola (the is ...
n novelist, /sup> dramatist, /sup> critic, philosopher, and essayist. /sup> Her work combines insights from the natural sciences, the humanities, art, and anti-colonial struggles in order to unsettle what she refers to as the "overrepresentation of Man".
Black studies Black studies or Africana studies (with nationally specific terms, such as African American studies and Black Canadian studies), is an interdisciplinary academic field that primarily focuses on the study of the history, culture, and politics of ...
, economics, history, neuroscience, psychoanalysis, literary analysis, film analysis, and philosophy are some of the fields she draws on in her scholarly work.


Biography

Sylvia Wynter was born in
Cuba Cuba, officially the Republic of Cuba, is an island country, comprising the island of Cuba (largest island), Isla de la Juventud, and List of islands of Cuba, 4,195 islands, islets and cays surrounding the main island. It is located where the ...
to Jamaican parents, actress Lola Maude (Reid) Wynter and tailor Percival Wynter. At the age of two, she and her brother Hector and their parents returned to their home country of Jamaica. She attended the Ebenezer primary school in Kingston and, at the age of 9, won a scholarship to attend the St Andrew High School for Girls, also in Kingston. In 1946, she was competed for and won the Jamaica Centenary Scholarship for Girls, which took her to
King's College London King's College London (informally King's or KCL) is a public university, public research university in London, England. King's was established by royal charter in 1829 under the patronage of George IV of the United Kingdom, King George IV ...
to read for her B.A. in modern languages (Spanish) from 1947 to 1951. She was awarded the M.A. in December 1953 for her thesis, a critical edition of a Spanish comedia, . In 1956, Wynter met the Guyanese actor and novelist
Jan Carew Jan Rynveld Carew (24 September 1920 – 6 December 2012) was a Guyana-born novelist, playwright, poet and educator, who lived at various times in The Netherlands, Mexico, the UK, France, Spain, Ghana, Jamaica, Canada and the United States. ...
, who became her second husband. In 1958, she completed ''Under the Sun'', a full-length stage play, which was bought by the
Royal Court Theatre The Royal Court Theatre, at different times known as the Court Theatre, the New Chelsea Theatre, and the Belgravia Theatre, is a West End theatre#London's non-commercial theatres, non-commercial theatre in Sloane Square, London, England, opene ...
in London. In 1962, Wynter published her only novel, ''The Hills of Hebron'', based on ''Under the Sun.'' After separating from Carew in the early 1960s, Wynter returned to academia, and in 1963, was appointed assistant lecturer in Hispanic literature at the Mona campus of the
University of the West Indies The University of the West Indies (UWI), originally University College of the West Indies, is a public university system established to serve the higher education needs of the residents of 18 English-speaking countries and territories in t ...
. She remained there until 1974. During this time the Jamaican government commissioned her to write the play ''1865–A Ballad for a Rebellion,'' about the
Morant Bay rebellion The Morant Bay Rebellion (11 October 1865) began with a protest march to the courthouse by hundreds of people led by preacher Paul Bogle in Morant Bay, Jamaica. Some were armed with sticks and stones. After seven men were shot and killed by t ...
, and a biography of Sir
Alexander Bustamante Sir William Alexander Clarke Bustamante (born William Alexander Clarke; 24 February 1884 – 6 August 1977) was a Jamaican politician and Jamaica Labour Party leader, who, on Independence Day, August 6th, 1962, became the first prime minister ...
, the first prime minister of independent Jamaica. In 1974, Wynter was invited by the Department of Literature at the
University of California at San Diego The University of California, San Diego (UC San Diego in communications material, formerly and colloquially UCSD) is a public land-grant research university in San Diego, California, United States. Established in 1960 near the pre-existing Sc ...
to be a professor of Comparative and Spanish Literature and to lead a new program in Third World literature. She left UCSD in 1977 to become chairperson of African and Afro-American Studies, and professor of Spanish in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at
Stanford University Leland Stanford Junior University, commonly referred to as Stanford University, is a Private university, private research university in Stanford, California, United States. It was founded in 1885 by railroad magnate Leland Stanford (the eighth ...
, where she worked until 1997. She is now
Professor Emerita ''Emeritus/Emerita'' () is an honorary title granted to someone who retirement, retires from a position of distinction, most commonly an academic faculty position, but is allowed to continue using the previous title, as in "professor emeritus". ...
at Stanford University. In the mid to late 1960s, Wynter began writing critical essays addressing her interests in Caribbean, Latin American, and
Spanish history The history of Spain dates to contact between the List of the Pre-Roman peoples of the Iberian Peninsula, pre-Roman peoples of the Mediterranean Sea, Mediterranean coast of the Iberian Peninsula with the Greeks and Phoenicians. During Classical A ...
and literatures. In 1968 and 1969 she published a two-part essay proposing to transform scholars' very approach to literary criticism, "We Must Learn to Sit Down Together and Talk About a Little Culture: Reflections on West Indian Writing and Criticism". Wynter has since written numerous essays in which she seeks to rethink the fullness of human
ontologies In information science, an ontology encompasses a representation, formal naming, and definitions of the categories, properties, and relations between the concepts, data, or entities that pertain to one, many, or all domains of discourse. More ...
, which, she argues, have been curtailed by what she describes as an over-representation of (western bourgeois) Man as if it/he were the only available mode of complete humanness. She suggests how multiple knowledge sources and texts might frame our worldview differently. In 2010, Sylvia Wynter was awarded the
Order of Jamaica The Order of Jamaica is the fifth of the six orders in the Jamaican honours system. The Order was established in 1969, and it is considered the equivalent of a knighthood in the British honours system. Membership in the Order can be conferred upon ...
(OJ) for services in the fields of education, history, and culture.


Critical work

Sylvia Wynter's scholarly work is highly poetic, expository, and complex. Her long career has seen her work on a range of marxist and decolonial issues with a uniquely powerful analytic framework drawn from her wide-ranging, multi-disciplinary reading. She draws from anthropology, sociology, philosophy, cognitive science, and history. Starting with a basis in literary criticism, Wynter moved through a marxist analysis of the Iberian colonial ''pieza'' system in her monumental '' Black Metamorphosis'', toward a cultural analysis grounded in the politics of being from the perspective of Fanon's autophobic subject. She analyzes how marginalized cultural formations like
Myal Myal is an Afro-Jamaican spirituality. It developed via the creolization of African religions during the slave era in Jamaica. It incorporates ritualistic magic, spiritual possession and dancing. Unlike Obeah, its practices focus more on the conn ...
,
Rastafarianism Rastafari is an Abrahamic religion that developed in Jamaica during the 1930s. It is classified as both a new religious movement and a social movement by scholars of religion. There is no central authority in control of the movement and much ...
, Vodou, and Jonkonnu, provide a zero ground and catalytic zone of resistance against European hegemony. Her work attempts to elucidate the development and maintenance of colonial modernity and modern man, and the possibility of resistance to its overrepresentation as the human, rather than one among many 'genres of the human.' She deftly interweaves science, philosophy, literary theory, and
critical race theory Critical race theory (CRT) is an academic field focused on the relationships between Social constructionism, social conceptions of Race and ethnicity in the United States census, race and ethnicity, Law in the United States, social and political ...
to explain how European man came to be considered the epitome of humanity, "Man 2" or "the figure of man". Wynter's theoretical framework has changed and deepened over the years. In her essay "Towards the Sociogenic Principle: Fanon, Identity, the Puzzle of Conscious Experience, and What It Is Like to be 'Black, Wynter developed a theoretical framework she refers to as the "sociogenic principle", which would become central to her work. Wynter derives this theory from an analysis of
Frantz Fanon Frantz Omar Fanon (, ; ; 20 July 1925 – 6 December 1961) was a French West Indian psychiatrist, political philosopher, and Marxist from the French colony of Martinique (today a French department). His works have become influential in the ...
's notion of "sociogeny". Wynter argues that Fanon's theorization of sociogeny envisions human being (or experience) as not merely biological, but also based in stories and symbolic meanings generated within culturally specific contexts. Sociogeny as a theory therefore overrides, and cannot be understood within, Cartesian dualism for Wynter. The social and the cultural influence the biological. In her groundbreaking essay "Unsettling the Coloniality of Being/Power/Truth/Freedom: Towards the Human, After Man, Its Overrepresentation—An Argument", Wynter’s genealogy of “Man” offers a radical critique of Western humanism by tracing how the category of the human has been historically constructed. Her framework outlines a progression from Christian Man to Man1 and then Man2, each iteration reinforcing systems of exclusion and domination under the guise of universality. The first configuration, Christian Man, emerged during medieval Europe. In this formulation, “Man” was defined primarily in theological terms. The ideal human was a Christian subject, whose purpose was salvation through alignment with divine law. This concept was fundamentally spiritual and moral, centering Europe as the site of truth and divine favor. Non-Christians—pagans, Muslims, Jews, and Indigenous peoples—were dehumanized as infidels and excluded from this spiritual-humanist ideal. This model was replaced during the Renaissance and Enlightenment by Man1, associated with secular humanism and the rise of liberal rationality, also known as ''homo politicus''. Man1 redefined the human in terms of reason, science, and empiricism, marking a shift from religious to political and rational criteria. Rooted in the works of figures like Descartes and Locke, this “rational Man” was implicitly white, male, bourgeois, and European. Wynter critiques this version of the human for universalizing a narrow, Eurocentric identity while excluding vast populations deemed irrational, primitive, or underdeveloped. Man1 enabled and justified transatlantic slavery, colonialism, and racial hierarchy by grounding difference in nature and reason. The most recent formation, Man2, develops through the rise of biocentric and evolutionary thinking in the 19th and 20th centuries. Here, the human is framed through the lens of Darwinian biology, economic behavior, and technocratic knowledge. Man2 becomes the ''homo oeconomicus'' of neoliberalism—an entrepreneurial, self-maximizing subject. This version of the human, while more secular and “objective,” still preserves racial and class exclusions by linking human worth to economic productivity and scientific rationality. It represents a continuation of the colonial logic, now masked by ostensibly post-racial, meritocratic ideals. Wynter’s genealogy reveals how each version of “Man” institutionalizes a “code of symbolic life and death,” a hijacking of what Danielli calls the "internal reward system" of human cognition, determining perceptions of who is fully human and who is not. She argues for a new conception of the human, building on the Fanonian "third event" of sociogeny, by which we can propose a Human that is both bios and logos, nature and culture. As such, she proposes a notion of species that moves beyond the overrepresentation of the Western, bourgeois, white male subject, and more generally, the dehumanizing biocentric notion of Man put into place by Europe since the 19th century. Her project calls for the reinvention of the human outside colonial and biocentric logics toward a plural, hybrid humanity grounded in poetics and culture, what she calls ''homo narrans'' (story-telling human) as we are shaped and continuously re-shape ourselves through the narratives we create.


Works


Novel

* ''The Hills of Hebron.'' London: Jonathan Cape, 1962. Extracted in ''
Daughters of Africa ''Daughters of Africa: An International Anthology of Words and Writings by Women of African Descent from the Ancient Egyptian to the Present'' is a compilation of orature and literature by more than 200 women from Africa and the African diaspora ...
'' (1992), ed.
Margaret Busby Margaret Yvonne Busby, , Hon. FRSL (born 1944), also known as Nana Akua Ackon, is a Ghanaian-born publisher, editor, writer and broadcaster, resident in the UK. She was Britain's then youngest publisher as well as the first black female book p ...
.


Critical text

* ''Do Not Call Us Negros: How Multicultural Textbooks Perpetuate Racism'' (1992) * ''We Must Learn to Sit Down Together and Talk About a Little Culture: Decolonizing Essays 1967–1984'' (2022)


Drama

* ''Miracle in Lime Lane'' (1959) * ''Shh... It's a Wedding'' (1961) * ''1865 – A Ballad for a Rebellion'' (1965) * ''The House and Land of Mrs. Alba'' (1968) * ''Rockstone Anancy'' (1970) * ''Maskarade'' (1973)


Film

*''The Big Pride'' (1961), with
Jan Carew Jan Rynveld Carew (24 September 1920 – 6 December 2012) was a Guyana-born novelist, playwright, poet and educator, who lived at various times in The Netherlands, Mexico, the UK, France, Spain, Ghana, Jamaica, Canada and the United States. ...


Essays/criticism

* "The Instant-Novel Now". ''New World Quarterly'' 3.3 (1967): 78–81. * "Lady Nugent's Journal". ''
Jamaica Journal The ''Jamaica Journal'' is a peer-reviewed academic journal published by the Institute of Jamaica. It publishes scholarly articles on the history, natural history, art, literature, music, and culture of Jamaica. Its predecessor was the ''Journal ...
'' 1:1 (1967): 23–34. * "We Must Learn to Sit Down Together and Talk about a Little Culture: Reflections on West Indian Writing and Criticism: Part One". ''
Jamaica Journal The ''Jamaica Journal'' is a peer-reviewed academic journal published by the Institute of Jamaica. It publishes scholarly articles on the history, natural history, art, literature, music, and culture of Jamaica. Its predecessor was the ''Journal ...
'' 2:4 (1968): 23–32. * "We Must Learn to Sit Down Together and Talk about a Little Culture: Reflections on West Indian Writing and Criticism: Part Two". ''Jamaica Journal'' 3:1 (1969): 27–42. * "Book Reviews: Michael Anthony ''Green Days by the River'' and ''The Games Were Coming''". ''Caribbean Studies'' 9.4 (1970): 111–118. * "Jonkonnu in Jamaica: Towards the Interpretation of the Folk Dance as a Cultural Process". ''
Jamaica Journal The ''Jamaica Journal'' is a peer-reviewed academic journal published by the Institute of Jamaica. It publishes scholarly articles on the history, natural history, art, literature, music, and culture of Jamaica. Its predecessor was the ''Journal ...
'' 4:2 (1970): 34–48. * "Novel and History, Plot and Plantation". ''
Savacou ''Savacou: A Journal of the Caribbean Artists Movement'' was a journal of literature, new writing and ideas founded in 1970 as a small co-operative venture, led by Edward Kamau Brathwaite, on the Mona campus of the University of the West Indies, ...
'' 5 (1971): 95–102. * "Creole Criticism: A Critique". ''New World Quarterly'' 5:4 (1972): 12–36. * "One-Love—Rhetoric or Reality?—Aspects of Afro-Jamaicanism". ''Caribbean Studies'' 12:3 (1972): 64–97. * "After Word". ''High Life for Caliban.'' By Lemuel Johnson. Ardis, 1973. * "Ethno or Socio Poetics". ''Alcheringa/Ethnopoetics'' 2:2 (1976): 78–94. * "The Eye of the Other". ''Blacks in Hispanic Literature: Critical Essays.'' Ed. Miriam DeCosta-Willis. Kennikat Press, 1977. 8–19. * "A Utopia from the Semi-Periphery: Spain, Modernization, and the Enlightenment". ''Science Fiction Studies'' 6:1 (1979): 100–107. * "History, Ideology, and the Reinvention of the Past in Achebe's ''Things Fall Apart'' and Laye's ''The Dark Child''". ''Minority Voices'' 2:1 (1978): 43–61. * "Sambos and Minstrels". ''Social Text'' 1 (Winter 1979): 149–156. * "In Quest of Matthew Bondsman: Some Cultural Notes on the Jamesian Journey". ''Urgent Tasks'' 12 (Summer 1981). * ''Beyond Liberal and Marxist Leninist Feminisms: Towards an Autonomous Frame of Reference'', Institute for Research on Women and Gender, 1982. * "New Seville and the Conversion Experience of
Bartolomé de Las Casas Bartolomé de las Casas, Dominican Order, OP ( ; ); 11 November 1484 – 18 July 1566) was a Spanish clergyman, writer, and activist best known for his work as an historian and social reformer. He arrived in Hispaniola as a layman, then became ...
: Part One". ''
Jamaica Journal The ''Jamaica Journal'' is a peer-reviewed academic journal published by the Institute of Jamaica. It publishes scholarly articles on the history, natural history, art, literature, music, and culture of Jamaica. Its predecessor was the ''Journal ...
'' 17:2 (1984): 25–32. * "New Seville and the Conversion Experience of Bartolomé de Las Casas: Part Two". ''Jamaica Journal'' 17:3 (1984): 46–55. * "The Ceremony Must Be Found: After Humanism". ''Boundary II'' 12:3 & 13:1 (1984): 17–70. * "On Disenchanting Discourse: 'Minority' Literary Criticism and Beyond". ''Cultural Critique'' 7 (Fall 1987): 207–44. * "Beyond the Word of Man: Glissant and the New Discourse of the Antilles". ''
World Literature Today ''World Literature Today'' (''WLT'') is an American magazine of international literature and culture, published at the University of Oklahoma. The magazine's stated goal is to publish international essays, poetry, fiction, interviews, and book ...
'' 63 (Autumn 1989): 637–647. * "Beyond Miranda's Meanings: Un/Silencing the 'Demonic Ground' of
Caliban Caliban ( ), the subhuman son of the sea witch Sycorax, is an important character in William Shakespeare's play ''The Tempest''. His character is one of the few Shakespearean figures to take on a life of its own "outside" Shakespeare's own w ...
's Women". ''Out of the Kumbla: Caribbean Women and Literature.'' Ed.
Carole Boyce Davies Carole Boyce Davies is a Caribbean-American professor of Africana Studies and English at Cornell University, the author of the prize-winning ''Left of Karl Marx: The Political Life of Claudia Jones'' (2008) and ''Black Women, Writing and Identity: ...
and Elaine Savory Fido. Africa World Press, 1990. 355–372. * "Columbus and the Poetics of the ''Propter Nos''". ''Annals of Scholarship'' 8:2 (1991): 251–286. * "Tras el 'Hombre,' su última palabra: Sobre el posmodernismo, les damnés y el principio sociogénico". ''La teoría política en la encrucijada descolonial. Nuevo Texto Crítico'', Año IV, No. 7, (Primer Semester de 1991): 43–83. * "'Columbus, The Ocean Blue and 'Fables that Stir the Mind': To Reinvent the Study of Letters". ''Poetics of the Americas: Race, Founding and Textuality'' 8:2 (1991): 251–286. * "Rethinking 'Aesthetics': Notes Towards a Deciphering Practice". ''Ex-iles: Essays on Caribbean Cinema''. Ed. Mbye Cham. Africa World Press, 1992. 238–279.
"'No Humans Involved': An open letter to my colleagues"
''Voices of the African Diaspora'' 8:2 (1992). * "Beyond the Categories of the Master Conception: The Counterdoctrine of the Jamesian Poiesis". '' C.L.R. James's Caribbean''. Ed. Paget Henry and Paul Buhle. Duke University Press, 1992. 63–91. * "But What Does Wonder Do? Meanings, Canons, Too?: On Literary Texts, Cultural Contexts, and What It's Like to Be One/Not One of Us". ''Stanford Humanities Review'' 4:1 (1994). * "The Pope Must Have Been Drunk, the King of Castile a Madman: Culture as Actuality and the Caribbean Rethinking of Modernity". ''Reordering of Culture: Latin America, the Caribbean and Canada in the 'Hood''. (1995): 17–42.
"1492: A New World View"
(1995), ''Race, Discourse, and the Origin of the Americas: A New World View''. Ed. Sylvia Wynter, Vera Lawrence Hyatt, and Rex Nettleford. Smithsonian Institution Press, 1995. 5–57. * "Is 'Development' a Purely Empirical Concept, or also Teleological?: A Perspective from 'We the Underdeveloped. ''Prospects for Recovery and Sustainable Development in Africa''. Ed. Aguibou Y. Yansané. Greenwood, 1996. 299–316. * "Columbus, the Ocean Blue, and 'Fables That Stir the Mind': To Reinvent the Study of Letters". ''Poetics of the Americas: Race, Founding and Textuality.'' Ed. Bainard Cowan and Jefferson Humphries. Louisiana State UP, 1997. 141–163. * "'
Genital Mutilation Genital modifications are forms of body modifications applied to the human sex organs, human sexual organs, including invasive modifications performed through genital cutting or surgery. The term genital enhancement seem to be generally used for ...
' or 'Symbolic Birth?' Female Circumcision, Lost Origins, and the Aculturalism of Feminist/Western Thought". ''Case Western Reserve Law Review'' 47.2 (1997): 501–552. * "Black Aesthetic". ''The Encyclopedia of Aesthetics''. Vol. 1. Oxford University Press, 1998. 273–281. * "Africa, The West and the Analogy of Culture: The Cinematic Text After Man". ''Symbolic Narratives/African Cinema: Audiences, Theory and the Moving Image.'' Ed. June Givanni. London British Film Institute, 2000. 25–76.
"The Re-Enchantment of Humanism: An Interview with Sylvia Wynter"
'' Small Axe'' 8 (2000): 119–207. * "'A Different Kind of Creature': Caribbean Literature, the Cyclops Factor and the Second Poetics of the ''Propter Nos''". ''Annals of Scholarship'' 12:1/2 (2001). * "Towards the Sociogenic Principle:
Fanon Frantz Omar Fanon (, ; ; 20 July 1925 – 6 December 1961) was a French West Indian psychiatrist, political philosopher, and Marxist from the French colony of Martinique (today a French department). His works have become influential in the fiel ...
, Identity, the Puzzle of Conscious Experience, and What It Is Like to be 'Black. ''National Identities and Socio-Political Changes in Latin America''. Ed. Mercedes F. Durán-Cogan and Antonio Gómez-Moriana. New York: Routledge, 2001. 30–66. *"Unsettling the Coloniality of Being/Power/Truth/Freedom: Towards the Human, After Man, Its Overrepresentation – An Argument". ''CR: The New Centennial Review'' 3.3 (2003): 257–337. * "On How We Mistook the Map for the Territory and Re-Imprisoned Ourselves in Our Unbearable Wrongness of Being, of Désêtre: Black Studies Toward the Human Project". ''Not Only the Master's Tools: African-American Studies in Theory and Practice.'' Eds. Lewis R. Gordon and Jane Anna Gordon. Paradigm, 2006. 107–169. * "''Proud Flesh'' Inter/Views Sylvia Wynter". Greg Thomas. ''ProudFlesh: A New Afrikan Journal of Culture, Politics & Consciousness'' 4 (2006). * "Human Being as Noun, or Being Human as Praxis?: On the Laws/Modes of Auto-Institution and our Ultimate Crisis of Global Warming and Climate Change". Paper presented in the Distinguished Lecture and Residency at the Center for African American Studies, Wesleyan University, April 23, 2008. * "Unparalleled Catastrophe for Our Species? Or, to Give Humanness a Different Future: Conversations". Interview. ''Sylvia Wynter: On Being Human as Praxis.'' Duke, 2014. 9–89. * "The Ceremony Found: Towards the Autopoetic Turn/Overturn, its Autonomy of Human Agency, and the Extraterritoriality of (Self-)Cognition". ''Black Knowledges/Black Struggles: Essays in Critical Epistemology.'' Eds Jason R. Ambroise and Sabine Broeck. Liverpool, UK: Liverpool University Press, 2015. 184–252. *'' Black Metamorphosis: New Natives in a New World'' (unpublished manuscript)


References


Sources

*Buck, Claire (ed.), ''Bloomsbury Guide to Women's Literature''. London: Bloomsbury, 1992. *Wynter, Sylvia, and David Scott. "The Re-Enchantment of Humanism: An Interview with Sylvia Wynter". ''Small Axe'', 8 (September 2000): 119–207. *Wynter, Sylvia. "Unsettling the Coloniality of Being/Power/Truth/Freedom: Towards the Human, After Man, Its Overrepresentation—An Argument". ''CR: The New Centennial Review'', Volume 3, Number 3, Fall 2003, pp. 257–337.


Further reading

* Jason R. Ambroise, "On Sylvia Wynter's Darwinian Heresy of the Third Event''. ''American Quarterly'' 70, no 4 (December 2018): 847–856. * Anthony Bogues (ed.), ''After Man, Towards the Human: Critical Essays on Sylvia Wynter'', 2006. *
Kamau Brathwaite Edward Kamau Brathwaite, CHB (; 11 May 1930 – 4 February 2020), was a Barbadian poet and academic, widely considered one of the major voices in the Caribbean literary canon.Staff (2011)"Kamau Brathwaite." New York University, Department of Co ...
, "The Love Axe/1; Developing a Caribbean Aesthetic", ''BIM'', 16 July 1977. *
Daryl Cumber Dance Daryl Cumber Dance (born January 17, 1938) is an American academic best known for her work on black folklore. Biography Daryl Veronica Cumber was born in Richmond, Virginia, to Allen and Veronica Bell Cumber. She attended Ruthville High School ...
(ed.), ''Fifty Caribbean Writers: A Bio-bibliographical Critical Sourcebook'', 1986. * Demetrius L. Eudell, "'Come on Kid, Let’s Go Get the Thing': The Sociogenic Principle and the Being of Being Black/Human". ''Black Knowledges/Black Struggles: Essays in Critical Epistemology''. Ed. Jason Ambroise and Sabine Broeck. Liverpool University Press, 2015. 21–43. * Demetrius L. Eudell, "From Mode of Production to Mode of Auto-Institution: Sylvia Wynter's Black Metamorphosis of the Labor Question". '' Small Axe'' 49 (March 2016): 47–61. * Karen M. Gagne, "On the Obsolescence of the Disciplines: Frantz Fanon and Sylvia Wynter Propose a New Mode of Being Human". ''Human Architecture: Journal of the Sociology of Self-Knowledge'' 5 (2007): 251–264. * Kelly Baker Josephs, "The Necessity for Madness: Negotiating Nation in Sylvia Wynter’s ''The Hills of Hebron''". ''Disturbers of the Peace: Representations of Madness in Anglophone Caribbean Literature.'' University of Virginia Press, 2013. 45–68. * David Scott. "Preface: Sylvia Wynter's Agonistic Intimations". ''Small Axe'' 49 (March 2016): vii–x. * Greg Thomas, "The Body Politics of 'Man' and 'Woman' in an 'Anti-Black' World: Sylvia Wynter on Humanism's Empire (A Critical Resource Guide)". ''On Maroonage: Ethical Confrontations with Anti-Blackness.'' Ed. P. Khalil Saucier and Tryon P. Woods. Africa World, 2015. 67–107. * Greg Thomas, "Marronnons / Let's Maroon: Sylvia Wynter's ''Black Metamorphosis'' as a Species of Maroonage". ''Small Axe'' 49 (March 2016): 62–78. * Shirley Toland-Dix, "''The Hills of Hebron:'' Sylvia Wynter’s Disruption of the Narrative of the Nation". ''Small Axe:'' 25 (February 2008): 57–76. * Derrick White. "''Black Metamorphosis'': A Prelude to Sylvia Wynter’s Theory of the Human". ''The C.L.R. James Journal'' 16.1 (2010): 127–48. *Sylvia Wynter, ''Sylvia Wynter: On Being Human as Praxis.'' Katherine McKittrick, (ed). Duke University Press, 2014. *


External links

*
Sylvia Wynter: An Oral History
, Stanford Historical Society Oral History Program, 2017. {{DEFAULTSORT:Wynter, Sylvia 1928 births Living people 20th-century Jamaican novelists Academic staff of the University of the West Indies Alumni of King's College London Members of the Order of Jamaica Jamaican dramatists and playwrights Jamaican women dramatists and playwrights 20th-century Jamaican women writers Jamaican academics Jamaican women novelists Jamaican novelists Caribbean philosophers Women philosophers Jamaican women academics Jamaican female dancers Jamaican dancers Jamaican actors Jamaican expatriates in Cuba University of California, San Diego faculty Stanford University faculty Jamaican expatriates in the United Kingdom Jamaican expatriates in the United States