Frontiers of the Caribbean
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Author
Publication
2017 - Manchester University Press, No place, unknown, or undetermined
Language
English
Word Count
42,000 words, Guess
Page Count
168 pages
Identifiers
- ISBN-139781526114921
- ISBN-101526114925
- OCLC Control Number952368671
- Better World Books9781526114921
- Open LibraryOL28358812M
Classifications
- LCCF2106 .N36 2017
Description
This book argues that the frontier, usually associated with the era of colonial conquest, has great, continuing and under explored relevance to the Caribbean region. Identifying the frontier as a moral, ideational and physical boundary between what is imagined as civilisation and wilderness, the book seeks to extend frontier analysis by focusing on the Eastern Caribbean multi-island state of St Vincent and the Grenadines. The continuing relevance of the concept of frontier, and allied notions of civilisation and wilderness, are illuminated through an analysis of the ways in which SVG is perceived and experienced by both outsiders to the society and its insiders. Using literary sources, biographies and autobiography, the book shows how St Vincent is imagined and made sense of as a modern frontier; a society in the balance between an imposed civilised order and an untameable wild that always encroaches, whether in the form of social dislocation, the urban presence of the ?Wilderness people? or illegal marijuana farming in the northern St Vincent hills. The frontier as examined here has historically been and remains very much a global production. Simultaneously, it is argued that contemporary processes of globalisation shape the development of tourism and finance sectors, as well as patterns of migration, they connect to shifting conceptions of the civilised and the wild, and have implications for the role of the state and politics in frontier societies.
Subjects
Other Editions
- Frontiers of the Caribbean
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