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Memory, Migration and (De)Colonisation in the Caribbean and Beyond: Index

Memory, Migration and (De)Colonisation in the Caribbean and Beyond
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Contents
  5. Notes on contributors
  6. Prologue
  7. Introduction
  8. 1. Loving and leaving the new Jamaica: reckoning with the 1960s
  9. 2. Why did we come?
  10. 3. History to heritage: an assessment of Tarpum Bay, Eleuthera, the Bahamas
  11. 4. ‘While nuff ah right and rahbit; we write and arrange’: deejay lyricism and the transcendental use of the voice in alternative public spaces in the UK
  12. 5. Journeying through the ‘motherland’
  13. 6. De Zie Contre Menti Kaba – when two eyes meet the lie ends. A Caribbean meditation on decolonising academic methodologies
  14. 7. Organising for the Caribbean
  15. 8. The consular Caribbean: consuls as agents of colonialism and decolonisation in the revolutionary Caribbean (1795–1848)
  16. 9. To ‘stay where you are’ as a decolonial gesture: Glissant’s philosophy of Antillean space in the context of Césaire and Fanon
  17. 10. Finding the Anancyesque in Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar and the decolonisation project in Jamaica from 1938 to the present
  18. 11. Maybe one day I’ll go home
  19. Index

Index

Activism, 102, 107

African descendants, 139, 141

African heritage, 63–4

and musical cultures, 66

Africanness as a source of liberation, 144

Age of revolutions, 117

Aluminium Company of Canada, 88, 90 94 95

Anancy, 155

Antigua, 113, 143

AntipodeFoundation, 102

archipelago as metaphor, 139

archival practice, 102

archival silence, 4, 50

archives in the Caribbean, 38

authenticity, 72

Bahamas

colonial history, 39

communities, 38

Eleuthera Arts and Cultural Centre, 49

trade, 39–42

foreign investment, 44

House of Assembly, 45

intangible heritage, 51

living heritage, 38, 47, 49

memory, 38, 39, 47, 51

personal memories, 39–44, 46, 48

Progressive Liberal Party, 45

Tarpum Bay, 37–52

Tarpum Bay Historical and Heritage Society, 52

United Bahamian Party Black Power, 46

Bauxite, 91, 94, 96, 99, 100

Beach as metaphor, 139

Bishop’s High School (Guyana), 109, 180

Black aesthetics, 68

Black Atlantic, 57

Black British youth, 58, 63, 63, 74;

the raising of, 176

Black cultural knowledge, 66

Black exploitation and responses to, 63

Black History Month, 100

Black Power in Guyana, 108

Bogle-L’Ouverture Publications, 7, 176

Booker’s Company, 109

Botswana, 84

Bourbon reforms, 122

Brexit, 111

Bronze Woman, the, 34

Brutus of Julius Caesar, 154

Burnham, Forbes, 109

Bustamente, Alexander, 153

and Anancy, 164

and Caesar, 165

and Jamaican independence, 164

Caesar of Julius Caesar, 155, 157

Canada, colonial status, 98

Caribbean federation, 88

Caribbean immigration to Britain, 31, 108

experiences of racism, 6, 108, 173

resistance against racism, 7, 173

first impressions, 34, 80 81

finding employment, xii, 32, 33

finding housing, 33

and decolonisation, 7, 8

Caribbean War Memorial, Brixton, 79

Cassius of Julius Caesar

and social equality, 154

and Anancy, 157

and democracy, 157

Césaire, Aimé, 137, 140, 141

Central Intelligence Agency interventions in Guyana, 112

whistleblowing, 112

community knowledge, 11

Congress of Vienna, 122

consuls

citizenship, 118

information exchange, 118

the political geography of, 123

relation to surveillance, 118

counter-culture, 61

Creole culture, 136

Creole language, 136

Creolisation, 144

dancehall culture, 58, 74

De Tragedy au Julias Ceazaa/Julius Caesar in Jamaican English, 159

Decolonial gestures, 140

Decolonisation

of the academy, 9–13

in the Caribbean, 107

and the creation of a new history, 144

(de)colonisation, 1

and the everyday, 2

histories of, 1

in Jamaica, 153

and open access, 11

decolonising memory, 87

deejay, 57, 74

demystification, 143

development studies, 107

diasporic dialect, 70

displacement within the Caribbean, 100

dread talk, 160

Earl’s Court West Indian Students’ Centre, 109

Education, 110

in the colonial Caribbean

and the military, 81

in the commonwealth, 153

enslavement, 99, 136

Eurocentrism: resistance against, 71

Fanon, Frantz, 2, 137, 141

on decolonisation, 142–3

free trade, 122

Garvey, Marcus, 136

contribution to global politics, 162

Garveyism, 59, 63, 64

Georgetown (Guyana), 174

Glissant, Édouard, 136, 140, 141

Glocal

language, 67

experience, 75

Government Training College (Guyana), 179

Griot, 60

Guyana

and Britishness, 7

and colonialism, 9

Dutch Guyana, 3, 32

emigration from xi, 80, 107

Guyana Freedom Association, 6

and independence, 107, 108

Guyanese High Commission, 109

Haisla, 91, 94, 95, 101

Haiti

and ‘exceptionalism’, 124

and exclusion from the consular Caribbean, 124

and imperialism, 111

and independence, 4

Haitian Revolution, 3, 85

Hart, Richard, 164, 165

Henaksiala, 91

Hudson Bay Company, 90

Huntley Collection, 177

Huntley, Eric, 6, 175–78

Huntley, Jessica, 6

migration to Britain, 176

hybridity

cultural, 68

linguistic, 69

Indigeneity, 88

Indigenous

struggles, 97, 98

studies, 99, 102

scholars, 102

Institute for Indigenous Government and Langara College, 98

island talk, 69

Jagan, Cheddi, 108

Jamaica

child welfare, 21

coat of arms, 87

and colonialism, 9

colonisers, 88

and emigration, 20–1, 24–6, 97, 157–8

English invasion of, 3

farming communities, 95

impact on British popular culture, 160

independence day celebrations, 19–20

national identity, 22

national memory, 88

neighbourhood clearances, 24

post-colonial government, 22

return migration, 27

social unrest, 24

student protests, 28

sovereignty, 162

on world stage, 88, 154

and youth, 19

People’s National Party, 23

origins of, 165

Jamaican Labour Party, 165

Jamaican Sound Systems, 58

Jonestown Massacre, 110

Kincaid, Jamaica, 133, 137, 138

Kingston Methodist School, 179

Kitimat, 91, 93, 94, 97

La Rose, Irma, 177

La Rose, John, 177

Little Theatre Movement Pantomime (Jamaica), 166

London Metropolitan Archives, 177

Lyricism, 60, 64, 68, 71

Macbeth, 157

Mackenzie, Charles, 128

Mais, Roger, 29

Manichean world view, 142, 143, 144

Martinique, 139

Mercantilism, 117

Manley, Michael, 28, 29, 154

Manley, Norman, 22, 25, 27

in relation to Brutus, 163

Middle Passage, 135

mining, 90, 91, 96

catastrophes, 113

Canadian ownership of, 113

multiracialism, 84

Nandy, Ashis, 2

Napoleon Bonaparte, 125

Napoleonic Wars, 128

National Archives (Kew), 111

National sovereignty (Caribbean), 119

Négritude, 135

Neo-colonialism, 109

National Health Service, 81

Caribbean staff, 80

equal opportunity, 80

and ethnic minority staff, 82

Nobrega, Cecil, 34

Oral testimony, 5, 6

outernational, 71

Padmore, George, 136

Pakistan, 84

Patwa, 66, 71, 159

People’s National Party, 154

People’s Progressive Party, 108

plantocracy, 99

pollution by multinational corporations, 113

Post Office Workers Union (Guyana), 174

post-Windrush migrants, 107

postcolonial studies, 98

poverty, conditions of, 138

Puerto Rico, 120

Queen’s College (Guyana), 109

Queen Elizabeth, loyalty to, 81

Race Relations Act, 81

Rastafari, 23, 27, 29, 59, 61

and language, 160

reggae music, 61, 63, 74, 154, 159

its listeners, 66

as transcendental, 67

religion of Caribbean migrants, 80

reparations, 98, 110, 111

Return to Africa, 135

Rhodes Must Fall, 9

Rodney, Walter, 28, 177

assassination of, 110, 112

Royal Air Force, 81

Royal Shakespeare Company, 166

Saint-Domingue (Haiti), 120

relations with the Spanish Empire, 125

schooling in England, 35

self-emancipation, 110

shadeism, 162

and political inequality in Jamaica, 164

Shakespeare, William, 156

silencing, 37, 46, 50, 74, 97

Sir Arthur Lewis Institute for Social and Economic Studies, 91, 94, 95

Smith Memorial Church School, 174

Spanish American revolutions, 121

Spanish Empire, 120

relations with the US, 121

spatiality, 140

Stop and Search Law, 176

Tanzania, 84

Territorial contest, 124

The Tragedy of Julius Caesar

as a postcolonial text, 166

relation to Jamaican national sovereignty, 156

Thomas Jefferson, 125

tourism, 133

transcendentalism, 68

Treaty of San Lorenzo, 119

Trotman, Joyce, 7, 1, 21, 73, 179–80

University of the West Indies, 88

US Constitution, 118

Vancouver, 89, 90

and mining, 100

West Indian Federation, 165

West Indian Student’s Centre, 177

white supremacy, 61

whiteness, 58

Windrush

generation xii, 2, 7, 31

impact on British society, 84

scandal, 111

teachers and educators, 8

Working People’s Alliance Support Group, 110, 111

World Peace Council, 175

World War Two, contribution of Caribbean personnel, 79

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