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The audacity of the adventure of House of
Nehesi Publishers
By George Lamming
Editor’s
Note:
World-renown Barbadian novelist/scholar George Lamming recently congratulated
House of Nehesi Publishers on its 25th anniversary in 2007. By May of
its anniversary year, the small press outfit had already released nine
anniversary-year publications. The St. Martin publisher with a Caribbean-wide
outreach has also managed to publish a list of literati from within and
beyond the region, including Dr. Lamming, that belies its size and admitted
limited resources.
Throughout our Caribbean Region economic activity is to a large extent
externally propelled. Investment initiates from outside and the collective
investors are elsewhere: tourism, insurance, banking are some of the major
pinnacles of authority which determine what choices we make in exercising
control over our daily lives. The Governments may govern; but they do
not rule. It is against this background of an imagined sovereignty and
an enforced dependence that we must measure the audacity — and there
is no other word for what I mean — the audacity of those who initiated
from within the adventure of House of Nehesi Publishers. Such boldness
of enterprise in the area of publishing can easily collapse in five months;
so the 25th anniversary of Nehesi can arguably be celebrated as though
it were the 50th. And the evidence of the distinguished volumes it has
produced is so abundant that the founders and their supporters are entitled
to invent their own calendar for this purpose. Year 25 should be accorded
the applause due a 50 th anniversary in recognition of Nehesi’s
capacity for digging deep in their indigenous human resource, and surviving
the perils of waiting for some external force to determine your own agenda.
We celebrate House of Nehesi as a symbol of what it could mean to achieve
a genuine sovereignty of the imagination.
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