Recently, I was reading Jeremy Taylor’s review of Conversations with Caryl Phillips (ed. by Renée Shatteman), a compendium of nineteen interviews with the Kittitian-born, British writer, where, according to Taylor, we learn all kinds of details about the author. Among them, the revelation that Phillips “doesn’t see himself as part of a Caribbean literary tradition; in fact, he hardly thinks there is one.” Phillips is certainly not the first, nor the only writer with Caribbean roots to question the notion of a Caribbean literary tradition:
More here from a thought-provoking piece on the subject of a "Caribbean literary tradition," by Montague Kobbe.