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Bocas Swanzy Award honours Trinidad-born scholar Sandra Pouchet Paquet - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

The influence of Trinidad-born, US-based Caribbeanist scholar Sandra Pouchet Paquet in shaping decades of intellectual and critical thought is impossible to understate, the Bocas Lit Fest has said.

The festival is awarding her the 2023 Bocas Henry Swanzy Award for Distinguished Service to Caribbean Letters, in recognition of her pioneering contributions to academia, literature and cultural studies.

Founded in 2013, the award is named for Anglo-Irish radio producer Henry Swanzy, whose tenure at the Caribbean Voices programme from 1946-1954 engaged the work of West Indian writers with insight and depth. Following in the footsteps of Jamaican Una Marson, who founded Caribbean Voices, Swanzy’s role in foregrounding Caribbean literature to an international audience was without parallel.

Created by the Bocas Lit Fest in Swanzy’s memory, this award celebrates the contributions of editors, broadcasters, publishers, critics and others who have devoted their careers to developing Caribbean literature. These champions of Caribbean letters often worked behind the scenes and without fanfare.

The Henry Swanzy awardees are chosen by the festival’s organising committee and honoured annually, the release said.

In conferring this award on Pouchet Paquet, the Bocas Lit Fest recognises her generous innovations in the field of Caribbean literary studies. One of the first Caribbeanist scholars at a US university, Pouchet Paquet entered a field that was in flux, and committed herself to its transformation.

In the 1990s, in addition to educating and mentoring students, she directed the University of Miami’s Caribbean Writers Summer Institute, a groundbreaking initiative that shaped the careers of a generation of authors who soon became leading figures in Caribbean literature.

With her founding in 2003 of Anthurium: A Caribbean Studies Journal, Pouchet Paquet established an early born-digital journal that would swiftly be regarded as a rich repository for peer-reviewed scholarship of both academic and creative foundations.

Born in Trinidad, Pouchet Paquet pdid undergraduate and postgraduate degrees in the US. After a three-year period of teaching at UWI, Mona (1974–77), Pouchet Paquet took on assistant professorships at the Universities of Hartford and Pennsylvania. Her advocacy for the study, inclusion and interweaving of Caribbean scholarship into the wider academic community characterised her pedagogy at its earliest levels, and strengthened on each appointment, the release said.

Powerful and generative connections with Derek Walcott and George Lamming would keenly affect Pouchet Paquet’s career and its directions. She credits Lamming as her first true educator in Caribbean literature, and her own critical writings on Lamming’s work have been prolific, sustained and vigorous: her book The Novels of George Lamming (1980) remains a seminal text.

The range of interests across her other books and journal publications is testament to a keenly engaged critical consciousness, one committed to exploring Caribbean feminisms

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