Four decades of gender studies in the Anglophone Caribbean necessarily reflect a non-linear, composite trajectory. These essays chronicle and celebrate the diversity of sources in which their theories are rooted. Drawing on a lifetime of pedagogy, feminist praxis, cultural pioneering, and community creating and sustaining, Mohammed’s Writing Gender into the Caribbean is a formidable reckoning of a text. Spanning generations, examining movements, explicating rituals, surmounting easy biases, this academic work is both societal blueprint and an archive of the region’s gender policies and practices, presented by one of its most significant theorists. Indo-Caribbean feminisms; the fracturing masculinities of award-winning cinema; sexual persuasions in Trinidadian calypsos of the 1920s and 30s … to map the frontiers of these essays is to be amazed at the interdisciplinary terrain they claim.