Complicating categories of identification and employing multiple strategies of resistance, these Caribbean women writers show us paths out of and beyond the binaries embedded in colonialism and its aftermath. As their texts remember moments and sites of trauma beginning with the Middle Passage, they embark on new passages, claim oceanic spaces, and suggest directions that stretch beyond the Black Atlantic to a more complex understanding of how to "pull the sides of the sea together" in the twenty-first century.
The Sides of the Sea is organized in three sections: "Plumbing the Depths," which examines representations of the Middle Passage and its legacies; "Voicing the Wounds," which explores genealogies, inherited trauma, and potential healing; "Unsettling Borders," which discusses decolonial epistemologies, transgressive sexualities, and new visions of citizenship.