Coming soon: Caribbean Voices

‘Caribbean Voices’, a pioneering literary programme launched on the BBC World Service seventy-five years ago, is credited with kickstarting modern Caribbean literature. But how true is that and was the work any good? In an upcoming series on BBC Radio 3’s The Essay, five authors including Colin Grant and Paul Mendez (recently profiled on WritersMosaic) explore the legacy of ‘Caribbean Voices’. Is the BBC marking its own homework with such broadcasts? Perhaps, but as is evident in the first episode of the series on the writer and broadcaster Una Marson, it’s also shining a light on luminaries who have too long been eclipsed.
Photo of Una Marson courtesy of the BBC
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000xdzv
Ideas are like rabbits
‘Ideas are like rabbits, you get a couple and learn how to handle them, and pretty soon you will have a dozen.’
Soundsystem as pedagogy
'You left recalibrated. Heartbeat altered. Shoulders lowered.'
Bad Signal
'All language use can be seen as extending a hand; words and their corresponding meanings are always about relationships'
Minor Black Figures
Making art without looking over your shoulder
The Authenticator
Painful truths hidden in the shadows of history
Hedda
An imperfect description of humanity
Free Will
Will Harris reads his poem, 'Free Will'. Directed by Matthew Thompson and commissioned by the Adrian Brinkerhoff Poetry Foundation.
Half Written Love Letter
Selina Nwulu reads her poem, 'Half Written Love Letter'. Directed by Matthew Thompson and commissioned by the Adrian Brinkerhoff Poetry Foundation.
Illuminating, in-depth conversations between writers.
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The series that tells the true-life stories of migration to the UK.
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Nine writers explore the elusive emotional truth behind narratives and storytelling.
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