Essay from the year 2002 in the subject American Studies - Linguistics, grade: 1,7 (A-), Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (English Seminar), course: Caribbean-Canadian Literature, language: English, abstract: In her essay "African Roots and Continuities: Race, Space and the Poetics of Moving" Marlene Nourbese Philip portrays the Canadian Caribana festival, first held in 1967 and framed by the Canadian Centennial celebrations, and its prototype, Trinidadian Carnival. She mainly names two characters; Maisie and Totoben. Both occur throughout the essay engaged in one thing: the celebration of Carnival, or later then, Caribana in Toronto. Philip writes in a "Caribbean demotic of English", according to her own words. 1 As she discusses the phenomena of Carnival, this demotic is more suitable to give an accurate image of its origins. Especially the energy and the dynamic embedded in Caribana, and earlier Carnival is transported more lively. "Kinetic qualities" go with the language she calls a Caribbean demotic. These display the fascination and attraction of the festival, and this first statement might give a reason for her choice. She has composed an essay, which also satisfies historical needs. As she transports the knowledge of a single event's origin and its transformation throughout time, the question arises, why Philip did not choose Standard English to make her argument. This might be expected rather from a political and historical paper, than from one displaying only cultural aspects. Marlene Nourbese Philip s essay can be considered to be a historical essay, since she connects several stations in ,space and time, in other words, in geography and history. The connection is implied by her synonymous naming of the main characters, Maisie and Totoben, who connect the slave-ships to the Carnival parade in Toronto. 2 [...] 1Philip, Marlene Nourbese: "African Roots and Continuities: Race, Space and the Poetics of Moving". A Genealogy of Resistance and Other Essays. Ed. Marlene Nourbese Philip. Toronto: The Mercury Press, 1997. 202. 2 cf. 207.