The Arrivants: A New World Trilogy

Kamau Brathwaite

Pages

288

Year

1973

Difficulty

Challenging

Themes

African diaspora, Caribbean identity, colonialism, migration, oral tradition

A sweeping poetic trilogy that traces the migrations of African peoples from the continent through the Middle Passage to the Caribbean and beyond, written in the rhythms of nation language.

Why Start Here

The Arrivants collects Brathwaite’s first three major collections, Rights of Passage (1967), Masks (1968), and Islands (1969), into a single arc that is the foundation of everything he wrote after. The trilogy moves from the Caribbean to Africa and back, tracing the routes of the African diaspora not as history lesson but as lived, rhythmic experience. The poems are meant to be heard: Brathwaite built them on the cadences of calypso, jazz, blues, and West African drumming.

Start with this because it is the work that established Brathwaite’s voice and his central argument, that Caribbean poetry must sound like the Caribbean, not like England. The language is accessible even when the allusions are dense, because the rhythm carries you.

What to Expect

Poetry that moves like music. Brathwaite shifts between voices, registers, and geographies with the fluency of a jazz musician moving between keys. The trilogy is long but not uniform: each of the three parts has its own character. Rights of Passage is urban and restless, Masks is ancestral and ceremonial, Islands returns home with hard-won knowledge. Read it aloud when you can.

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