Category: PREE 11

Hurricane Melissa

Jamaica collectively held its breath as reports confirmed that Melissa had made landfall. Then a torrent of media: homes washing away in mudslides, death, people clawing at walls, screens from Jamaican, British, American and French news showing floods, people fleeing the sinking homes they had built.

All is Not Lost in Translation

Monumental global efforts were made to decipher the galactic federation’s languages. Human linguists managed to crack a few of them in a year, but problems arose. The xenobiology of the United Empire often didn’t match human physiology. Humans couldn’t mimic the beaked Camecian’s staccato chirping or the gilled Sisarua’s drone. We had the written languages down, but holovisual communication was awkward and fraught with errors.

PREEing Berlin’s House of World Cultures

For us at PREE it was a signal honour to be given such prominent positioning in Bonaventure Ndikung’s ‘radical revamp’ of this venerable German institution. As Siddhartha Mitter put it in his New York Times article on the renowned curator and writer, A New Energy is Vibrating at This House:
It’s a different energy for a German public institution — not necessarily in sync with its counterparts — but Ndikung isn’t worried about that. “We want to build a different world,” he said. “We want to think of the world differently,” he added, “and every step matters. Every drop of water matters. And even if you’re coming with a teaspoon, that’s fine.”

How to speak sex in Antiguan

JOANNE C. HILLHOUSE In Antigua, “wife” is sex or the female sex organ – you know the one “knuckle” is when your woman gives “wife” to another man “keep woman” is your side piece – you know, the woman you “dey wid” on the side We...

Brief and Candid Notes on Artificial Archive

An image conjured in 2023 by a text-to image generator of “a 19th-century Caribbean person writing” is not likely to be a historically accurate representation in every regard, and is not itself a historical document. However, it is a prompt for imagination that might get a Caribbean high-schooler thinking more about the life of a dark-skinned ancestor than simply actions relating to the reductive category of “Slave”.

The Art of Belonging

Whether intentionally or not, Born Ya transcends a straightforward telling of her life story; it is also the staking of a claim to a place that more and more doesn’t want her. It. Embedded within the narrative, by my read, is MacMillan’s attempt to assert her Jamaican identity while also considering, both overtly and implicitly, the challenges of being a white person in a predominantly black country, where racial dynamics are in constant flux.

La Uber Llorona

She holds a smartphone stolen from a band of Yankees that loudly proclaimed themselves as ‘horror tourists’ to the locals. It takes time to familiarize herself with the device and its features, especially when the previous owner keeps calling.

El Cuco

The denizens of La Malamuerte were accustomed to the occasional wandering tourist. Unsuspecting visitors who strayed within the establishment’s secluded walls usually stayed for a quick drink, so as not to be rude, then left. However, on this particular day, La Malamuerte became host to an group of obnoxious 20-somethings from Georgia who thought it would be fun to mock the locals and cause a scene.

Janoah and de Soulboat

Dandy dance till him salt-and-pepper mohawk dripping sweat. When him see me, him flash him gold teeth. The Devil’s red mask is back on his face. The day get as hot as hell. Me hands get so sweaty me bible slip. And though I standing in the sanctified body of Jaheim Murray, born-again christian, I am Warwick again, back on the battlefield.

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PREE 14

FICTION

The Talking Forest of Yaminsa
Ayasha Ayurbe

 

Seaside
Jose Belaval

 

Lifting the Veil
Yvonne Weekes

 

Scarface
Melanie Grant

 

All is Not Lost in Translation
Yzahira Valle García

 

Bush Baths
Amanda Haynes

 

Frankie’s Father
Danielle James

 

NONFICTION

The Things We Inherit, The Things We Let Go
Ashae Forsythe

 

POETRY

There is Only Wailing, The First Cries, Inheritance
Yashika Graham

 

An Abecedarian Cut in Half Like a Nose
Amelia Badri

 

Two Poems About Love
Kendel Hippolyte

 

bi·sex·u·al
Choiselle Joseph

 

beautiful hand
Allison Whittenberg

 

For Alton Ellis and other Poems
Amílcar Peter Sanatan

 

To Talk of Trees, The Cannon Ball Tree, Bloody Orange
Debra Providence

 

Blood Songs, Beasts of the Island, Storm Seasons
Joely Williams

 

ART-ICLES

Roberta Stoddart’s “All in the Family” 
Isis Semaj-Hall

 

INTERVIEWS

Unmothered, Unafraid, and Free: A Conversation with Camille U. Adams
Caryn Rae Adams

Entertainment Report on PREE