This dissertation’s principal objective is to examine the relationship between race and national belonging in the Dominican Republic, and to illustrate the necessity of moving beyond simplistic binaries when attempting to define and understand the process of Dominican national identity formation. In the analysis, I compare the manner in which the Afro subject—the Haitian, the West Indian cocolo, and the Afro-Dominican—is represented in three sugar-cane novels from the 1930s (General Rafael Trujillo's first decade in power), and in two much more recent works published in a politically less restrictive environment close to the turn of the millennium. The main point of reference for this study is an ideology that defines Haitians—and by extens...
The common misconception is that all Dominicans are racist – that Dominicans live in a Fanonesque re...
This dissertation integrates archival, ethnographic, and oral-historical research to investigate the...
The U.S. academy has a complicated relationship with the Dominican racial setting. Although scholars...
This dissertation’s principal objective is to examine the relationship between race and national bel...
This thesis analyses the importance of race for the construction of nation and ethnicity in the Domi...
This thesis analyzes the diverse representations of blackness and Haitian culture in the literary wo...
The dissertation examines literary and journalistic representations of blackness under the authorita...
The article discusses race, racism, and self-concept in the Dominican Republic. It explains the reas...
The concept of Dominican racial identity presents a problem in the investigation of Afro-Dominican l...
This study investigates the effects of Rafael Trujillo’s regime on the relationship between Dominica...
This independent study examines the different American perceptions of Dominican race during three im...
The goal for the research in this dissertation is to shed light on race construction and its connect...
My dissertation is titled "Ethnogenesis, Identity, and the Dominican Republic, 1844-Present." The to...
This dissertation, "Racial Geopolitics: Interrogating Caribbean Cultural Discourse in the Era of Glo...
This dissertation argues that geographical displacement has partly defined Dominican national identi...
The common misconception is that all Dominicans are racist – that Dominicans live in a Fanonesque re...
This dissertation integrates archival, ethnographic, and oral-historical research to investigate the...
The U.S. academy has a complicated relationship with the Dominican racial setting. Although scholars...
This dissertation’s principal objective is to examine the relationship between race and national bel...
This thesis analyses the importance of race for the construction of nation and ethnicity in the Domi...
This thesis analyzes the diverse representations of blackness and Haitian culture in the literary wo...
The dissertation examines literary and journalistic representations of blackness under the authorita...
The article discusses race, racism, and self-concept in the Dominican Republic. It explains the reas...
The concept of Dominican racial identity presents a problem in the investigation of Afro-Dominican l...
This study investigates the effects of Rafael Trujillo’s regime on the relationship between Dominica...
This independent study examines the different American perceptions of Dominican race during three im...
The goal for the research in this dissertation is to shed light on race construction and its connect...
My dissertation is titled "Ethnogenesis, Identity, and the Dominican Republic, 1844-Present." The to...
This dissertation, "Racial Geopolitics: Interrogating Caribbean Cultural Discourse in the Era of Glo...
This dissertation argues that geographical displacement has partly defined Dominican national identi...
The common misconception is that all Dominicans are racist – that Dominicans live in a Fanonesque re...
This dissertation integrates archival, ethnographic, and oral-historical research to investigate the...
The U.S. academy has a complicated relationship with the Dominican racial setting. Although scholars...