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- The Roots of Caribbean Identity: Language, Race and Ecology
£24.25
Availability: Manufactured on demand: supplied direct from the printer
- ISBN:9780521727457
- Format:Paperback
- Subject(s):First Language English
- Qualification:Caribbean
- Author(s):Peter A. Roberts
- Available from: December 2008
This book is original in its conception, perspective and treatment of the languages and identities of the West Indies as a whole.
£24.25
Availability: Manufactured on demand: supplied direct from the printer
Description
-
DESCRIPTION
Peter Roberts makes extensive use of a huge range of multiple and multilingual historical sources to let the voices of the past speak for themselves, and unearths forgotten connections that reveal the interrelatedness of territories and their 'historical saga'. The Roots of Caribbean Identity: Language, Race and Ecology presents a lucid account of a movement from a written, wholly European construction of Caribbean identity towards a more Caribbean one and relates how the identity of the Caribbean region and the identities of the separate islands within the region were shaped, set out within a chronological sequence starting from the time of the European encounters with the Amerindians and finishing at the end of the nineteenth century. Central elements of the title are race, place and language which are seen as a basic starting point for the constitution of identity.
- Contents
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FEATURES
Written by a key and trusted author.
Winner of the Gordon K. and Sybil Lewis book award.
Extensive use of historical resources.
Suitable for CAPE® examinations.
Illustrated and has at its central elements race, place and language which are seen as basic starting points for the constitution of identity.
Presents a lucid account of a movement from a written, wholly European construction of Caribbean identity towards a more Caribbean one.
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CONTENTS
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Ladinos, Caribs, Tainos, Criollos
- 3. Societies in the raw: from diversity to corruption
- 4. Creolisation, nativisation and enlightenment
- 5. The development of national identities in Hispaniola, Cuba and Puerto Rico
- 6. West Indians and Créoles in the smaller islands
- 7. Conclusion
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