Clarine Stephenson was a Jamaican novelist and poet,[1] one of the first women writers in Jamaica.[2]

Stephenson's novel Undine tells the story of a Jamaican governess, described in the novel as a "creole child of wealth, reared in the midst of luxury and idleness".[3] Forced to return to Jamaica to work as a governess, she escapes the dust of the city and falls in love with an Englishman. The Jamaican countryside is idealised as an "Eden", the "sweet dreamland of these happy hills".[4] After having her heart broken, she dies, having a vision of her former lover as Jesus Christ.[3] Kim Robinson-Walcott has remarked the fact that the novel features no black characters.[5]

Works

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  • 'The White Man's Prophecy', Jamaica Times, 21 August 1909.
  • Undine: An Experience. New York: Broadway Publishing House, 1911.
  • 'A West Indian miscellany: chip lagwood'. West Indian review, Vol. 2, no. 1 (Sept. 1935), p.59

References

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  1. ^ Claire Buck (ed.). "Stephenson, Clarine". The Bloomsbury Guide to Women's Literature. p. 1045.
  2. ^ Brenda F. Berrian; Aart G. Broek (1989). Bibliography of Women Writers from the Caribbean: 1831-1986. Three Continents Press. p. x. ISBN 978-0-89410-600-2.
  3. ^ a b Karen E. Sumner (1998). Whiteness and Women's Writing in the Caribbean (PDF) (Thesis). The University of Western Ontario. p. 101.
  4. ^ Evelyn O'Callaghan (2004). Women Writing the West Indies, 1804-1939: 'A Hot Place, Belonging To Us'. Routledge. pp. 84–5, 98, 103. ISBN 1-134-44096-0.
  5. ^ Kim Robinson-Walcott (2006). Out of Order!: Anthony Winkler and White West Indian Writing. University of the West Indies Press. p. 176. ISBN 978-976-640-172-6.