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

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

Contents

Notes on contributors

Prologue
Rod Westmaas

Introduction
Jack Webb, Maria del Pilar Kaladeen and William Tantam

1. Loving and leaving the new Jamaica: reckoning with the 1960s

Matthew J. Smith

2. Why did we come?

B. M. Nobrega

3. History to heritage: an assessment of Tarpum Bay, Eleuthera, the Bahamas

Kelly Delancy

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

William ‘Lez’ Henry

5. Journeying through the ‘motherland’

Peter Ramrayka

6. De Zie Contre Menti Kaba – when two eyes meet the lie ends. A Caribbean meditation on decolonising academic methodologies

Nadine King Chambers

7. Organising for the Caribbean

Anne Braithwaite

8. The consular Caribbean: consuls as agents of colonialism and decolonisation in the revolutionary Caribbean (1795–1848)

Simeon Simeonov

9. To ‘stay where you are’ as a decolonial gesture: Glissant’s philosophy of Antillean space in the context of Césaire and Fanon

Miguel Gualdrón Ramírez

10. Finding the Anancyesque in Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar and the decolonisation project in Jamaica from 1938 to the present

Ruth Minott Egglestone

11. Maybe one day I’ll go home

Rod Westmaas

Index

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