Caribbean Globalizations, 1492 to the Present Day

Richard Scholar editor Eva Sansavior editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Liverpool University Press

Published:2nd Feb '21

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

This paperback is available in another edition too:

Caribbean Globalizations, 1492 to the Present Day cover

Caribbean Globalizations explores the relations between globalization and the Caribbean since 1492, when Columbus first arrived in the region, to the present day. It aims to help change prevalent ways of thinking, not only about the Caribbean archipelago as a complex field of historical enquiry and cultural production, but also about the nature of globalization. It argues that the region has long been – and remains – a theatre of conflict between, as well as a site of emergence for, different forms of globalization. It thereby offers the opportunity to focus research and debate across the interdisciplinary spectrum by reflecting upon and re-imagining the idea of globalization in a specifically Caribbean context. It does so at a time when the Caribbean is urgently rethinking its own identity and place in a world where the Western economic model of globalization is more in question than ever. With contributors including Patrick Chamoiseau, Christopher Miller, Mimi Sheller and Charles Forsdick, this book will be required reading for all scholars working in Caribbean Studies.

Reviews 'Caribbean Globalizations offers rich, innovative and cutting edge contributions to ongoing debates about the necessity to reexamine the Caribbean’s complex authenticities, entangled histories, imagined discourses, multifaceted cultures, and postplantation economic and political systems as they relate to the globalized world... it will be valuable to scholars and students in Globalization Studies, Comparative Caribbean Cultural Studies, Francophone Studies, Diaspora and Atlantic Studies, and New World Studies.'
Anny Dominique Curtius, University of Iowa
'The volume is commendable for offering a dialogized, balanced view of Western and Caribbean perspectives on the Caribbean, of vital importance to globalization and postcolonial studies.'
Foara Adhikari, Bulletin of Francophone Postcolonial Studies
'Fumagalli succeeds in bringing the multilayered cultural-political history of the Haitian–Dominican border to the fore while refusing to comply “with the idea that an acceptable future is unattainable” (p. 391).'
Philip Kaisary, New West Indian Review

ISBN: 9781800349056

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

281 pages