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  2. List of Jamaican writers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Jamaican_writers

    This is a list of Jamaican writers, including writers either from or associated with Jamaica This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources .

  3. List of Jamaican British people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Jamaican_British...

    Akala (born 1983), journalist, author, activist and poet; Raymond Antrobus (born 1986), poet, educator and writer. The first poet to win the Rathbones Folio Prize for his collection The Perseverance; Barbara Blake-Hannah (born 1941), author and Journalist. British television's first black on-camera reporter and interviewer

  4. Evan Jones (writer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evan_Jones_(writer)

    Evan Jones was born on 29 December 1927 in Portland, Jamaica, the son of a Fred M. Jones, a farmer, and Gladys, a Quaker missionary and teacher. One of seven children, Jones grew up in rural Jamaica and was educated locally, then at the prestigious boarding school Munro College, and subsequently attended Haverford College in Pennsylvania.

  5. Lady Colin Campbell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lady_Colin_Campbell

    Georgia Arianna, Lady Colin Campbell (née Ziadie, born 17 August 1949), also known as Lady C, is a British Jamaican author, socialite, and television personality who has published seven unauthorised books about the British royal family.

  6. Jamaican literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamaican_literature

    Jamaican Thomas MacDermot (1870–1933) is credited with fostering the creation of Jamaican literature. According to critic Michael Hughes, MacDermot was "probably the first Jamaican writer to assert the claim of the West Indies to a distinctive place within English-speaking culture," [2] and his Becka's Buckra Baby [3] as the beginning of modern Caribbean literature.

  7. British Jamaicans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Jamaicans

    The Caribbean island nation of Jamaica was a British colony between 1655 and 1962. More than 300 years of British rule changed the face of the island considerably (having previously been under Spanish rule, which depopulated the indigenous Arawak and Taino communities [6]) – and 92.1% of Jamaicans are descended from sub-Saharan Africans who were brought over during the Atlantic slave trade. [6]

  8. James Berry (poet) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Berry_(poet)

    James Berry, OBE, Hon. FRSL (28 September 1924 – 20 June 2017), [1] was a Jamaican poet who settled in England in the 1940s. His poetry is notable for using a mixture of standard English and Jamaican Patois. [2]

  9. Andrew Salkey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Salkey

    Andrew Salkey (30 January 1928 – 28 April 1995) was a Jamaican novelist, poet, children's books writer and journalist of Jamaican and Panamanian origin.. He was born in Panama but was raised in Jamaica, moving to Britain in the 1952 to pursue a job in the literary world, combining a job in a South London comprehensive school teaching English with a job working on the door of a West End night ...