She studies HIV/AIDS and, in 1993, published a pioneering study on "Jamaican Men and Same-Sex Activities."[5] She has authored several papers and reports on the subject, including a 1999 UNESCO report on Jamaica's experience with HIV/AIDS.[6]
Poetry
Royes has been writing poetry since the 1960s.[7] Her poetry has been included in anthologies such as Heinemann's Jamaica Woman (1980) and Anthology of African and Caribbean Writing in English (1982), the Penguin Book of Caribbean Verse in English (1986), and the Oxford Book of Caribbean Verse (2005).[8][9] In 1996 she published her first collection, The Caribbean Raj, consisting of about 30 poems divided into four sections.[7][10] In 2001 she won the National Literary Competition and in 2005 she published a second volume, Days and Nights of the Blue Iguana, which included some poems from her first collection as well as new works.[11][12][13]
References
^Brown, Stewart; McWatt, Mark, eds. (2005). The Oxford Book of Caribbean Verse. Oxford University Press. p. xi.
^Zach, Paul, ed. (1989). Insight Guide Jamaica. Apa Productions. p. 314. ISBN9780134663760.
^Nettleford, Rex M.; LaYacona, Maria (1985). Dance Jamaica: Cultural Definition and Artistic Discovery: The National Dance Theatre Company of Jamaica, 1962-1983. Grove Press. pp. 88, 236. ISBN9780394543161.
^"Appointments". The Daily Gleaner. 8 January 1981. p. 2.
^Cowell, Noel M. (March 2011). "Public Discourse, Popular Culture and Attitudes Towards Homosexuals in Jamaica". Sexualities in the Caribbean. 60 (1): 31–60. JSTOR41635291.
^Muturi, Nancy (2008). "Faith-Based Initiatives in Response to HIV/AIDS in Jamaica". International Journal of Communication (2): 108–131.