An author from this archipelago described the history of a family from the Bamana Empire in the novel Segu and reimagined Wuthering Heights on this archipelago in the novel Windward Heights. For 10 points each:
[10h] Name this archipelago, the home of author Maryse Condé (“mah-REEZ kon-DAY”).
ANSWER: Guadeloupe [or Gwadloup; prompt on Leeward Islands or Îles-Sous-le-Vent; prompt on Lesser Antilles or Antillean Islands or Petites Antilles; prompt on Les Abymes or Basse-Terre]
[10m] This behavior partly titles a novel by Condé in which Rosélie learns the truth about her husband’s murder, but is suspected herself. This taboo behavior titles an Oswald de Andrade manifesto that quips, “Tupí or not Tupí: that is the question.”
ANSWER: cannibalism [or anthropophagism; or Anthropophagic Manifesto; or Manifesto Antropófago; or descriptions indicating eating people]
[10e] Another Condé novel reimagines the enslaved woman Tituba as an orphan from Barbados who is accused of serving Satan, and meets Hester Prynne while imprisoned in this Puritan town.
ANSWER: Salem, Massachusetts
<World Literature>