Becoming West Indian: Culture, Self, and Nation in St. Vincent, by Virginia Heyer Young. Washington and London: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1993, 229 pp. Reviewed byHelen I. Safa, Professor of Anthropology and Latin American Studies, University of Florida
Who are the Wapisiana? They have adopted so many of the things and ways of non-Indians that many peo...
The African Diaspora represents vastly complex migratory patterns. This project studies the journeys...
Based on ethnography, oral history and archival research, this study examines the culture of the Acc...
This paper provides an alternative perspective of how West Indian students renegotiate their core...
St. Thomas is one of the three main islands in the West Indies that constitute the United States Vir...
In 1833, the abolition of slavery in the British Empire led to the import of exploited South Asian i...
This project focuses on the St. David\u27s Island Community in Bermuda, and considers how this geogr...
The black immigrant population in New York City has grown exponentially since 1990, such that West I...
[First paragraph] Roots of Jamaican Culture. MERVYN C. ALLEYNE. London: Pluto Press, 1988. xii ...
This study, based on novels written originally in English by writers from English-speaking West Indi...
At the turn of the nineteenth century, Britishness was integral to the culture of colonialism that p...
This article first examines the historical background of the Virginian-American Indian identity afte...
Resistance to oppression is a phenomenon that occurs world-wide and that shows remarkable variation ...
This book argues that the frontier, usually associated with the era of colonial conquest, has great,...
Recent histories of cultural encounters in colonial America emphasize how interactions between nativ...
Who are the Wapisiana? They have adopted so many of the things and ways of non-Indians that many peo...
The African Diaspora represents vastly complex migratory patterns. This project studies the journeys...
Based on ethnography, oral history and archival research, this study examines the culture of the Acc...
This paper provides an alternative perspective of how West Indian students renegotiate their core...
St. Thomas is one of the three main islands in the West Indies that constitute the United States Vir...
In 1833, the abolition of slavery in the British Empire led to the import of exploited South Asian i...
This project focuses on the St. David\u27s Island Community in Bermuda, and considers how this geogr...
The black immigrant population in New York City has grown exponentially since 1990, such that West I...
[First paragraph] Roots of Jamaican Culture. MERVYN C. ALLEYNE. London: Pluto Press, 1988. xii ...
This study, based on novels written originally in English by writers from English-speaking West Indi...
At the turn of the nineteenth century, Britishness was integral to the culture of colonialism that p...
This article first examines the historical background of the Virginian-American Indian identity afte...
Resistance to oppression is a phenomenon that occurs world-wide and that shows remarkable variation ...
This book argues that the frontier, usually associated with the era of colonial conquest, has great,...
Recent histories of cultural encounters in colonial America emphasize how interactions between nativ...
Who are the Wapisiana? They have adopted so many of the things and ways of non-Indians that many peo...
The African Diaspora represents vastly complex migratory patterns. This project studies the journeys...
Based on ethnography, oral history and archival research, this study examines the culture of the Acc...