Brenda DoHarris

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Brenda Chester DoHarris (born 9 June 1946) is a writer and academic from Guyana.[1]

Career

Doharris was born in Georgetown, British Guiana and attended Bishops' High School on scholarship. Her education and experience growing up in rural Kitty were a major influence on her writing.[1]

She is a professor of English at Bowie State University in Bowie, Maryland,[2] and a graduate of Columbia University[2] and Howard University, where she received a B.A. (1970) then M.S. (1972) in English.[1] The first Guyanese woman to run in Guyana for office of presidency of a trades union,Script error: No such module "Unsubst". she became actively involved in the Guyanese political movement for democracy during the 1970s.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

She has travelled widely in Africa, the Caribbean and China, where she attended the U.S./China Joint Conference on Women's Issues.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Her area of scholarly interest is post-colonial women's literature.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Works

Her novel The Coloured Girl in the Ring: A Guyanese Woman Remembers (1997) is a fictional exploration of a young Black woman's coming of age in British Guiana of the late 1950s and early 1960s. Told against the backdrop of political and racial turbulence, the novel employs a first-person narrative format and proffers a well-defined portrait of the main character's recollection of her family life, her oppressive school teachers, her friends' doomed inter-racial romance and her thoughts on race and identity.

According to a review in the College Language Association Journal, "The story is remarkable for its picture of a Guyanese village, but it requires a sequel to truly explore the life of this nameless narrator, who remains more an onlooker and reporter than the central persona of this piece."[3] A review from Kaieteur News describes it as "...a bitter-sweet narrative, one that is poignant and deeply moving, and made even more so by a feminist perspective that rightly celebrates the sustaining role of women in colonised societies."[4]

Calabash Parkway (2005) is about Guyanese immigrant women in Brooklyn, New York, women who struggle against the odds to gain legal residence.

Doharris was a contributor for Walter A. Rodney: A Promise of Revolution by Clairmont Chung. 2012. (Template:ISBN)[5]

Awards

Calabash Parkway won the Guyana Prize for Literature.[6]

References

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  6. "Calabash Parkway: A Novel" Reviewed by Gokarran Sukhdeo, Guyana Journal