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	<title>Comments on: Jamaica: Saved by The Cure</title>
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	<description>The world is talking. Are you listening?</description>
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		<title>By: irie.mobi &#187; Jamaica: Saved by The Cure</title>
		<link>http://globalvoicesonline.org/2007/01/19/jamaica-saved-by-the-cure/comment-page-1/#comment-623978</link>
		<dc:creator>irie.mobi &#187; Jamaica: Saved by The Cure</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 20 Jan 2007 18:18:15 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>[...] Jamaica: Saved by The Cure - In the summer of 1987, Jamaican writer Marlon James is saved by The Cure: &#8220;I don’t remember 1987 by any sequence of days and dates; I remember it by breaths I lost, gasping at “Just Like Heaven.” I can’t recall any major events but I do remember the sad drum clatter of “Like Cockatoos,” fighting [...]Jamaica, Colombia: Identity etc - In response to some questions posed to him in December, Jamaican writer Geoffrey Philp writes an open letter recounting a visit to a Colombian restaurant in Florida with his (part-Colombian) family: &#8220;Of course, I’ve chosen to blog about it and this is one way about talking about your questions, which are really questions about identity.This [...]Jamaica: Political advice from Lifehacker - B.art hacks an article from the personal productivity blog Lifehacker about ways to become politically involved to make it relevant to a Jamaican audience. Jamaica: Thoughts on MLK Day - Jamaican Leon Robinson presents his thoughts on Martin Luther King Day (observed on January 15th in the US): &#8220;Though Martin Luther King Day is an American celebration, I think blacks everywhere should celebrate it, as we are one race, and a victory for one is a victory for all.&#8220; Jamaica: 30 years on, critique still holds water - The latest installment in Geoffrey Philp&#8217;s &#8220;In My Own Words&#8221; series, which focuses on Caribbean writers, is a critique of the Caribbean&#8217;s failure to give recognition to the arts written 30 years ago by Jamaican poet/playwright/screenwriter/journalist Olivier Stephenson. Geoffrey kicks off the comments with the words: &#8220;Although it’s sad that something you had written over [...] [...]</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[...] Jamaica: Saved by The Cure &#8211; In the summer of 1987, Jamaican writer Marlon James is saved by The Cure: &#8220;I don’t remember 1987 by any sequence of days and dates; I remember it by breaths I lost, gasping at “Just Like Heaven.” I can’t recall any major events but I do remember the sad drum clatter of “Like Cockatoos,” fighting [...]Jamaica, Colombia: Identity etc &#8211; In response to some questions posed to him in December, Jamaican writer Geoffrey Philp writes an open letter recounting a visit to a Colombian restaurant in Florida with his (part-Colombian) family: &#8220;Of course, I’ve chosen to blog about it and this is one way about talking about your questions, which are really questions about identity.This [...]Jamaica: Political advice from Lifehacker &#8211; B.art hacks an article from the personal productivity blog Lifehacker about ways to become politically involved to make it relevant to a Jamaican audience. Jamaica: Thoughts on MLK Day &#8211; Jamaican Leon Robinson presents his thoughts on Martin Luther King Day (observed on January 15th in the US): &#8220;Though Martin Luther King Day is an American celebration, I think blacks everywhere should celebrate it, as we are one race, and a victory for one is a victory for all.&#8220; Jamaica: 30 years on, critique still holds water &#8211; The latest installment in Geoffrey Philp&#8217;s &#8220;In My Own Words&#8221; series, which focuses on Caribbean writers, is a critique of the Caribbean&#8217;s failure to give recognition to the arts written 30 years ago by Jamaican poet/playwright/screenwriter/journalist Olivier Stephenson. Geoffrey kicks off the comments with the words: &#8220;Although it’s sad that something you had written over [...] [...]</p>
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