Description

Book Synopsis

An inspiring collection from one of the Caribbean's most vital political figures.



Trade Review

'Andaiye was the most important Caribbean woman intellectual-activist of the generation of Walter Rodney. Her subtle, river-clear, loving and angry intelligence is rescued here, and with it the memory of the political struggles of the 1970s and 80s in which a critical feminism emerged from the ruins of the Black Power moment'

-- Richard Drayton, Rhodes Professor of Imperial History at King's College London

'It is not an exaggeration to say that this volume will occupy a vaunted place alongside the writings of C. L. R. James, Frantz Fanon, Aime Cesaire, Sylvia Wynter, Edouard Glissant, George Lamming, Kamau Brathwaite, Stuart Hall, and certainly Walter Rodney. And like her distinguished predecessors, Andaiye and her brilliant collaborator, Alissa Trotz, did not put this book together in order to gather dust in a library. The title says it all: The Point is to Change the World'

-- Robin D.G. Kelley, author of 'Freedom Dreams: The Black Radical Imagination'

'This collection is a benchmark for the study of the Caribbean radical imagination'

-- Clem Seecharan, Emeritus Professor of History at London Metropolitan University and author of 'Sweetening "Bitter Sugar": Jock Campbell, the Booker Reformer in British Guiana, 1934-66'

'A comprehensive assessment of Andaiye's journey of personal, political and professional growth. Notwithstanding her privileged position, she was a resolute advocate for working-class women. Her legacy as a Caribbean activist and strategist is formidable'

-- Patricia Rodney, Chair of the Walter Rodney Foundation

Table of Contents

FOREWORDS
Andaiye’s Radical Imagination—with Special Reference to Hern Engagement with the Working People’s Alliance - Clem Seecharan
Between Home and Street: Andaiye’s Revolutionary Vision - Robin D. G. Kelley
The Principle of Justice as a Labor of Caring - Honor Ford-Smith
Editor’s Note: On the Politics of Precision
Preface and Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
PART ONE - LEARNING LESSONS FROM PAST ORGANIZING
Section I - The Good and Bad of Some Earlier Feminist and Left Organizing in the Region
1. The Angle You Look from Determines What You See: Towards a Critique of Feminist Politics and Organizing in the Caribbean [2002]
2. The Historic Centrality of Mr. Slime: George Lamming’s Pursuit of Class Betrayal in Novels and Speeches [2003]
3. The Grenada Revolution, the Caribbean Left, and the Regional Women’s Movement: Preliminary Notes on One Journey [2010]
4. Conversations about Organizing: Revised Excerpts from an Interview with Andaiye by David Scott [2004]
Section II - Notes on the Guyana Indian/African Race Divide, and on Organizing within and against it
5. 1964: The Rupture of Neighborliness and its Legacy for Indian/African Relations [2008; 2018] (with D. Alissa Trotz)
6. Organizing within and against Race Divides: Lessons from Guyana’s African Society for Cultural Relations with Independent Africa, Indian Political Revolutionary Associates, and the Early Working People’s Alliance [2008, 2017/2018]
7. Three Letters against Race Violence [2004, 2008]
PART TWO - A DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVE: STARTING WITH THE UNWAGED CARING WORK OF MAINLY WOMEN WE REACH ALL SECTORS
Section I - Why and How to Count Unwaged Work
8. Valuing Unwaged Work: A Preparatory Brief for CARICOM Ministers Responsible for Women’s Affairs Attending the 4th World Conference on Women [1994]
9. Grassroots Women Learning to Count their Unwaged Work: Summary Report on a 2001–2002 Trial [2009]
10. Looking at the Legalization of Abortion from the Perspective of Women as Unwaged Carers [1993]
Section II - Breaking the Frontier between Home and Street, Unwaged and Waged
11. Strike for a Millennium which Values all Women’s Work and all Women’s Lives: A Call to Action [2000]
12. The Impact of the IMF Structural Adjustment Programme on Women’s Unwaged Work and How We Can Resist It [c.mid-1980s]
13. Housewives and Other Carers in the Guyanese Resistance of the Late 1970s and Early 1980s: Looking Back [2010] 134
14. Four Letters in Defense of Workers, Unwaged and Waged, and their Families [2011, 2012, 2018]
PART THREE - THE POLITICAL IN THE PERSONAL
Section I - My Breast and Yours, and the Inequalities of Power
15. The War on Cancer as Seen by an Embattled Survivor [2017/2018]
16. Sister Survivor: For Audre Lorde [1992]
Section II - Women and Depression: Auto/biographies
17. Asylum: Diary of the Last Seven Days in a Women’s Psychiatric Ward [c.1973]
18. M: A Daughter’s Tale [c.1982]
Section III - Undomesticating Violence
19. Against the Beating of Children: Submission to a Parliamentary Sub-committee on the Corporal Punishment of Children [2013]
20. Three Letters against Sexual Violence against Children [2010]
21. Knife Edge: Living with Domestic and Economic Violence [2013]
22. Women as Collateral Damage in Race Violence [2002]
23. Sexual Violence is a Question of Whose Honor? [2000]
24. Sexual Abuse and the Uses of Power [2018]
25. Letter to the Police Complaints Authority on an Allegation of Rape against a Police Commissioner [2012]
PART FOUR - TOWARDS STRENGTHENING THE MOVEMENT
26. Gender, Race, and Class: A Perspective on the Contemporary Caribbean Struggle [2009]
Last Word
27. Walter Rodney’s Last Writing on and for the Guyanese Working People [2010]
Afterword: Andaiye and the Caribbean Radical Organizing Tradition - Anthony Bogues
Index

The Point is to Change the World

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    A Paperback / softback by Andaiye, Alissa Trotz

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      View other formats and editions of The Point is to Change the World by Andaiye

      Publisher: Pluto Press
      Publication Date: 20/04/2020
      ISBN13: 9780745341279, 978-0745341279
      ISBN10: 0745341276

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      An inspiring collection from one of the Caribbean's most vital political figures.



      Trade Review

      'Andaiye was the most important Caribbean woman intellectual-activist of the generation of Walter Rodney. Her subtle, river-clear, loving and angry intelligence is rescued here, and with it the memory of the political struggles of the 1970s and 80s in which a critical feminism emerged from the ruins of the Black Power moment'

      -- Richard Drayton, Rhodes Professor of Imperial History at King's College London

      'It is not an exaggeration to say that this volume will occupy a vaunted place alongside the writings of C. L. R. James, Frantz Fanon, Aime Cesaire, Sylvia Wynter, Edouard Glissant, George Lamming, Kamau Brathwaite, Stuart Hall, and certainly Walter Rodney. And like her distinguished predecessors, Andaiye and her brilliant collaborator, Alissa Trotz, did not put this book together in order to gather dust in a library. The title says it all: The Point is to Change the World'

      -- Robin D.G. Kelley, author of 'Freedom Dreams: The Black Radical Imagination'

      'This collection is a benchmark for the study of the Caribbean radical imagination'

      -- Clem Seecharan, Emeritus Professor of History at London Metropolitan University and author of 'Sweetening "Bitter Sugar": Jock Campbell, the Booker Reformer in British Guiana, 1934-66'

      'A comprehensive assessment of Andaiye's journey of personal, political and professional growth. Notwithstanding her privileged position, she was a resolute advocate for working-class women. Her legacy as a Caribbean activist and strategist is formidable'

      -- Patricia Rodney, Chair of the Walter Rodney Foundation

      Table of Contents

      FOREWORDS
      Andaiye’s Radical Imagination—with Special Reference to Hern Engagement with the Working People’s Alliance - Clem Seecharan
      Between Home and Street: Andaiye’s Revolutionary Vision - Robin D. G. Kelley
      The Principle of Justice as a Labor of Caring - Honor Ford-Smith
      Editor’s Note: On the Politics of Precision
      Preface and Acknowledgements
      Abbreviations
      PART ONE - LEARNING LESSONS FROM PAST ORGANIZING
      Section I - The Good and Bad of Some Earlier Feminist and Left Organizing in the Region
      1. The Angle You Look from Determines What You See: Towards a Critique of Feminist Politics and Organizing in the Caribbean [2002]
      2. The Historic Centrality of Mr. Slime: George Lamming’s Pursuit of Class Betrayal in Novels and Speeches [2003]
      3. The Grenada Revolution, the Caribbean Left, and the Regional Women’s Movement: Preliminary Notes on One Journey [2010]
      4. Conversations about Organizing: Revised Excerpts from an Interview with Andaiye by David Scott [2004]
      Section II - Notes on the Guyana Indian/African Race Divide, and on Organizing within and against it
      5. 1964: The Rupture of Neighborliness and its Legacy for Indian/African Relations [2008; 2018] (with D. Alissa Trotz)
      6. Organizing within and against Race Divides: Lessons from Guyana’s African Society for Cultural Relations with Independent Africa, Indian Political Revolutionary Associates, and the Early Working People’s Alliance [2008, 2017/2018]
      7. Three Letters against Race Violence [2004, 2008]
      PART TWO - A DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVE: STARTING WITH THE UNWAGED CARING WORK OF MAINLY WOMEN WE REACH ALL SECTORS
      Section I - Why and How to Count Unwaged Work
      8. Valuing Unwaged Work: A Preparatory Brief for CARICOM Ministers Responsible for Women’s Affairs Attending the 4th World Conference on Women [1994]
      9. Grassroots Women Learning to Count their Unwaged Work: Summary Report on a 2001–2002 Trial [2009]
      10. Looking at the Legalization of Abortion from the Perspective of Women as Unwaged Carers [1993]
      Section II - Breaking the Frontier between Home and Street, Unwaged and Waged
      11. Strike for a Millennium which Values all Women’s Work and all Women’s Lives: A Call to Action [2000]
      12. The Impact of the IMF Structural Adjustment Programme on Women’s Unwaged Work and How We Can Resist It [c.mid-1980s]
      13. Housewives and Other Carers in the Guyanese Resistance of the Late 1970s and Early 1980s: Looking Back [2010] 134
      14. Four Letters in Defense of Workers, Unwaged and Waged, and their Families [2011, 2012, 2018]
      PART THREE - THE POLITICAL IN THE PERSONAL
      Section I - My Breast and Yours, and the Inequalities of Power
      15. The War on Cancer as Seen by an Embattled Survivor [2017/2018]
      16. Sister Survivor: For Audre Lorde [1992]
      Section II - Women and Depression: Auto/biographies
      17. Asylum: Diary of the Last Seven Days in a Women’s Psychiatric Ward [c.1973]
      18. M: A Daughter’s Tale [c.1982]
      Section III - Undomesticating Violence
      19. Against the Beating of Children: Submission to a Parliamentary Sub-committee on the Corporal Punishment of Children [2013]
      20. Three Letters against Sexual Violence against Children [2010]
      21. Knife Edge: Living with Domestic and Economic Violence [2013]
      22. Women as Collateral Damage in Race Violence [2002]
      23. Sexual Violence is a Question of Whose Honor? [2000]
      24. Sexual Abuse and the Uses of Power [2018]
      25. Letter to the Police Complaints Authority on an Allegation of Rape against a Police Commissioner [2012]
      PART FOUR - TOWARDS STRENGTHENING THE MOVEMENT
      26. Gender, Race, and Class: A Perspective on the Contemporary Caribbean Struggle [2009]
      Last Word
      27. Walter Rodney’s Last Writing on and for the Guyanese Working People [2010]
      Afterword: Andaiye and the Caribbean Radical Organizing Tradition - Anthony Bogues
      Index

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