Elizabeth Bishop and Audre Lorde: Two Views of ‘Florida’ in the Global South Atlantic

2019 ◽  
pp. 280-293
Author(s):  
Marvin Campbell

This chapter investigates how the transnational crossings Elizabeth Bishop launched from the peninsular Florida and its Key into Haiti, Mexico, Aruba, and most famously, Brazil, across North & South, Questions of Travel and Geography III correspond to an analogous geographical arc on the part of Audre Lorde, in which the Southeastern United States, Oaxaca, Mexico, and the Virgin Islands inform an equally fluid and indeed oceanic space from her work of the 1980s onward, when Lorde began spending significant time in the Virgin Islands. As Bishop sought to ‘do more’ with Key West and its environs in than modernist predecessors like Wallace Stevens and Hart Crane by employing this island to make investments in gender, race, nation, and class, Audre Lorde brought racial and sexual difference to the fore of this liminal crossing across national borders and boundaries, hybridizing her own better documented investments in Yoruba myth with a trans-American consciousness lodged squarely in not only the Caribbean and the Southeast, but in Oaxaca, Mexico and the Southwest. Such a remapping reveals two outsider poets who stand at the center of a literary formation where twentieth century American and African-American poetics converge and clash.

1952 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 136-136

The thirteenth session of the Caribbean Commission was held in the Virgin Islands from October 29 to November 3,1951, with Ward M. Canaday (United States) presiding. Items on the agenda included the budget for 1952, consideration of special reports and recommendations, and preparation for the fifth session of the West Indian Conference scheduled to be held in Jamaica in 1952.


1965 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 1070-1073

The Caribbean Council held its fifth and last meeting in Curaçao, Netherlands Antilles, from November 30 to December 4, 1964. Attending the meeting were delegates from France on behalf of French Guiana, Guadeloupe, and Martinique; the Netherlands Antilles; Surinam; the British Virgin Islands; the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico; and the United States Virgin Islands. Representatives of Antigua, Barbados, Dominica, Grenada, Montserrat, and St. Vincent, countries enjoying special observer status, attended the meeting. Also at the meeting were observers from the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and the United States.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ira A. Herniter ◽  
María Muñoz-Amatriaín ◽  
Timothy J. Close

ABSTRACTCowpea (Vigna unguiculata [L.] Walp.) was originally domesticated in sub-Saharan Africa but is now cultivated on every continent except Antarctica. Utilizing archaeological, textual, and genetic resources, the spread of cultivated cowpea has been reconstructed. Cowpea was domesticated in Africa, likely in both West and East Africa, before 2500 BCE and by 400 BCE was long established in all the modern major production regions of the Old World, including sub-Saharan Africa, the Mediterranean Basin, India, and Southeast Asia. Further spread occurred as part of the Columbian Exchange, which brought African germplasm to the Caribbean, the southeastern United States, and South America, and Mediterranean germplasm to Cuba, the southwestern United States and Northwest Mexico.


2020 ◽  
pp. 509-514
Author(s):  
Scott LaGreca

A crustose lichen species new to science – previously characterized in the literature but unnamed – is formally described. This new species, Chrysothrix bergeri sp. nov., ranges from the southeastern United States southwards to the Caribbean islands (Bahamas and Cuba) and eastwards to Bermuda. It is most easily confused with C. xanthina, from which it differs in both chemistry and ascospore shape. Bilimbia aurata and Bilimbia stevensoni are both confirmed as synonyms of C. xanthina. A lectotype is selected for Bilimbia aurata. Solvent E is recommended for the chromatographic separation of leprapinic and pinastric acids – two lichen secondary products critical for diagnosing certain species of Chrysothrix, including C. bergeri.


Plant Disease ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 91 (7) ◽  
pp. 910-910 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. M. Idris ◽  
J. C. Guerrero ◽  
J. K. Brown

Severe yellow leaf curl and plant stunting symptoms were observed in tomato plants from two home gardens in central Arizona (Phoenix area) and a tomato field in Sonora, Mexico during the fall of 2006. Disease symptoms were reminiscent of those reported in Florida during 1994 (4) and more recently in tomato fields in the Pacific Coast state of Sinaloa, Mexico found to be infected with the exotic Tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV) (2). Total DNA was extracted from two symptomatic tomato plants from Arizona and Sonora and used as a template in PCR. PCR products of the core region of the begomovirus coat protein gene (Cp) were cloned (n = 3) and the DNA sequence was determined. BLAST analysis of the 579 bases with sequences available in the NCBI GenBank database indicated the closest match was to an isolate of the monopartite begomovirus TYLCV from Israel, which was known to have been introduced into the Caribbean region, including Puerto Rico, the southeastern United States, and Mexico from 1990 to 1996 (1,4). The full-length TYLCV genome (approximately 2,800 bases) was amplified for a field isolate from each location by rolling circle amplification (RCA) using TempliPhi (Amersham Biosciences, Piscataway, NJ). RCA products were cloned into the plasmid vector pGEM7 (Promega, Madison, WI) that had been previously digested with SacI endonuclease. The complete TYLCV genome sequence was determined for six clones from each RCA product. Nucleotide analysis indicated that the complete TYLCV genome sequences from Sonora and Arizona, respectively, shared 97.6 and 97.7% nt identity. The comparative sequence analysis indicated that TYLCV-Sonora (TYLCV-Son) (GenBank Accession No. EF210555) was 99.1% nt identical to TYLCV reported recently from Culiacan, Mexico (GenBank Accession No. DQ631892). In contrast, TYLCV-AZ (GenBank Accession No. EF210554) shared 99.3% identity with an isolate from Texas, TYLCV-TX (GenBank Accession No. EF110890) (3). Interestingly, the TX and AZ TYLCV isolates contained a unique 29-nt deletion in the intergenic region (IR) between the TATA-box and the nonanucleotide, initiating at nt coordinate 2696. Except for the deletion in the IR region of the AZ and TX isolates, these viruses shared 97.6 to 99.1% nt identity to other TYLCV isolates reported in the Western Hemisphere. The genome sequence for TYLCV-Son shares high nt identity with TYLCV isolates identified in the Yucatan Peninsula and Pacific Coast of Mexico (2), the Caribbean region, and the southeastern United States, suggesting that a single TYLCV species was introduced and has spread throughout North America and the Caribbean (4). The absence of other TYLCV isolates in the Western Hemisphere with the novel 29-nt deletion noted for the TX and AZ isolates suggests that the latter two isolates originated from the same U.S. source. In Mexico, TYLCV was first introduced in the east coast and Yucatan region approximately in 1996. From there, this isolate has spread to the western part of the country (Sinaloa and Sonora) from 2004 to 2006 (2). Similarly, in the United States, TYLCV was introduced and spread in the eastern U.S. states beginning in 1994 (4), where it had been confined until it was discovered in Texas (3) and now Arizona during 2006. References: (1) J. Bird et al. Plant Dis. 85:1028, 2001. (2) J. K. Brown and A. M. Idris. Plant Dis. 90:1360, 2006. (3) T. Isakeit et al. Plant Dis. 91:466, 2007. (4) J. E. Polston et al. Plant Dis. 78:831, 1994.


1950 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 507-510

Ninth SessionThe ninth meeting of the Caribbean Commission was held at St. Thomas, Virgin Islands, from December 5 to 9 under the chairmanship of Ward M. Canaday (United States). One of the first items to be considered was the Secretary General's report on secretariat activities since the eighth meeting of the Commission. The Secretary-General (Cramer) reported that in addition to servicing the Commission and the Caribbean Research Council, the secretariat had carried out the publications program of the Commission, had handled numerous requests for information and assistance, and had undertaken studies on such subjects as soil erosion, Caribbean industry and the utilization of sugar by-products. The Commission approved appointments to the Caribbean Research Council and its committees on medicine, public health and nutrition, sociology and education, economics and statistics, engineering, and industrial development. It was decided to convene in 1950 a small conference of territorial statistical officers to discuss standardization of methods of reporting trade statistics. A United States paper on “Socio Economic Surveys in the Caribbean Area” which had been submitted at the eighth meeting was considered in the light of governmental comments on the projects proposed, and the Commission agreed to give priority to two projects deemed to be of the most immediate value to the social and economic development of the area: a study of Caribbean employment patterns and the factors affecting industrial productivity, and a study of educational and leadership requirements. Third order of priority was given to a survey of variations in the cost and levels of living in the various Caribbean territories.


Author(s):  
Gunvor Simonsen

From the 1670s to 1917, Denmark (until 1814 Denmark–Norway) maintained colonies in the eastern Caribbean. The island of St. Thomas was colonized in 1672, St. John in 1718, and St. Croix was bought from the French in 1733. Racial slavery soon came to dominate the Danish islands and was only abolished in 1848. Most people arrived to the islands as captive Africans, while most Europeans were of either Dutch or British origin. In 1917, the islands, constituting the Danish West Indies, were sold to the United States of America and became the US Virgin Islands. As part of the centennial of 2017, commemorating the transfer of the Virgin Islands to the United States of America, major Danish cultural institutions, such as the National Archives, the Royal Library, and the National Museum, digitized large collections concerning Danish activities and Danish rule in the Caribbean, including the archive of the Danish West India and Guinea Company, the archives of local government agencies in the Caribbean, large collections of photos, drawings, and maps, as well as a significant part of the written works concerning the Danish West Indies published prior to 1917. In combination with older digital platforms, new online resources facilitate the triangulation of many different kinds of evidence, which in turn promises to generate fascinating new histories of the people who lived in the US Virgin Islands while they were under Danish rule.


EDIS ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Elena Karlsen-Ayala ◽  
Matthew Edward Smith

The aptly named <i>Macrocybe titans</i>, meaning "giant head," is the largest known gilled mushroom in the Western Hemisphere. This species was originally described from Florida but can be found across the southeastern United States as well as the Caribbean, Central America, and parts of South America. These mushrooms are often found in clusters with the caps growing as large as 3 ft wide and 1&ndash;1.5 ft tall! This species was first discovered in Gainesville, Florida, and is generally found near buildings or roads. This new three-page publication of the UF/IFAS Plant Pathology Department describes these giant mushrooms, their discovery, and where to find them. Written by Elena Karlsen-Ayala and Matthew E. Smith.<br /><a href="https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/pp356">https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/pp356</a>


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