The most consequential Caribbean historian of her generation, Bridget Brereton has produced a string of innovative and path-breaking studies that have had a profound influence on the ways we have come to understand many of the major events in the area's history. This Work tips its hat to her contributions, as well as suggests ways to expand on the research agenda she has set. Taking its cue from Brereton, the essays are generally reader friendly in their exploration of the economic, social, economic, political and cultural history of the area. Brereton's work is always "balanced." So too are…mehr
The most consequential Caribbean historian of her generation, Bridget Brereton has produced a string of innovative and path-breaking studies that have had a profound influence on the ways we have come to understand many of the major events in the area's history. This Work tips its hat to her contributions, as well as suggests ways to expand on the research agenda she has set. Taking its cue from Brereton, the essays are generally reader friendly in their exploration of the economic, social, economic, political and cultural history of the area. Brereton's work is always "balanced." So too are the contributions to this anthology. Complex societies, Brereton insists, demand complex histories. These essays do exactly that. Like her work, this collection also breaks through old historiographical boundaries. To its credit, the geographical and thematic coverage is comprehensive although, not surprisingly, Trinidad and Tobago attracts a plurality of interest. Its range and mix make this work one of a kind. There are other anthologies that cover aspects of the area's history, but nothing as comprehensive in its historical and thematic reach. It brings to mind Gordon Lewis’s, The Growth of the Modern West Indies (1968) which for years was basic fare of graduate seminars. Lewis identified what he called Caribbean "characteristics." It was a house divided against itself in which parochial governing elites butted heads against outside liberal influences before and after emancipation, a place where status was symbolized by skin colour and an area, which with the collapse of King Sugar and emancipation, became a back water until World War II. This work expands on many of the same themes reaching beyond Lewis to cover all language areas.
Heather Cateau is a senior lecturer in Caribbean History at The University of the West Indies, St Augustine Campus. She has held the positions of Dean of the Faculty of Humanities and Education, Head of the Department of History and University Dean. Rita Pemberton is a former senior lecturer, Head of the Department of History and Deputy Dean, Student Affairs in the Faculty of Humanities and Education at The University of the West Indies, St Augustine Campus. Ronald Noel lectures in the Department of History at the University of the West Indies, St Augustine Campus. He came into academia after a career in industry which spanned three decades.
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List of Tables Abbreviations and Acronyms Introduction HEATHER CATEAU
Part 1: The Colonial Caribbean in Transition
1 ‘Little England’ vs ‘Great Britain’: Barbados Slavers in the Emancipation Debate HILARY MCD. BECKLES
2 No ‘Gentle Glide’ From Enslavement to Emancipation: The Post-Emancipation Labour Struggles in Tobago, 1838–1919 RITA PEMBERTON
3 The Impact of Christianity on Naming Practices in Post-Emancipation Barbados PEDRO L.V. WELCH
Part 2: Law, Justice and Empire
4 From Unicameralism to Bicameralism: Trinbago Constitutional Advances (1831–1962) BRINSLEY SAMAROO
5 “The Thorough Knowledge of the Island and All its Departments and Instruction in Political Science”: Representing the Patria in Puerto Rico’s First Elections Under Spain’s 1812 Constitution JUAN GONZÁLEZ MENDOZA
6 The Crown Is Not Welcomed: Government and Politics in British Guiana, 1953–1957 JAMES ROSE
7 Eric Williams and C.L.R. James: Intellectual Symbiosis and Political Counterpoint HUMBERTO GARCÍA-MUÑIZ
Part 3: Gendered Testimonies
8 Bridget Brereton’s Gendered Historiography of the Caribbean GELIEN MATTHEWS
9 Egodocuments by Women as Sources for Caribbean History: Three Cases from Late Colonial Suriname ROSEMARIJN HOEFTE
10 Imperial First Lady of Trinidad, Lady Rachel Hamilton-Gordon 1865–1870 DANE MORTON-GITTENS
11 Slavery, Gender and the Historiography of the French Antilles, 1635–1848 BERNARD MOITT
Part 4: Engendering History: Social and Political Life in the Caribbean
12 Gender and Protest at Morant Bay and in the Post-Emancipation Caribbean GAD HEUMAN
13 Inclusion/Exclusion: Women, Citizenship and Political Franchise in Early Twentieth-Century Trinidad and Tobago RHODA REDDOCK
14 Gender and Nation-Building in Barbados MARY CHAMBERLAIN
15 Ascent to Leadership: Women and the National Union of Public Workers of Barbados, 1975–1995 RICHARD A. GOODRIDGE
Part 5: Race Relations in the Caribbean: Contested Narratives
16 “Passing for White” in Bahamian Society During the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries GAIL SAUNDERS
17 It Featured a Gymkhana? Conflicting Identities in the Early Years of the Modern Crop Over Festival MARCIA BURROWES
18 Contesting Narratives of Trinidad and Tobago’s History: The Contribution of Bridget Brereton and an Exploration of the Syrian/Lebanese Narrative FIONA ANN RAJKUMAR
Part 6: History Matters: The Historian and Her Craft
19 Bridget Brereton and the Narratives of Modern Trinidad: An Assessment of Three Volumes MICHAEL TOUSSAINT
20 Called to Action: Caribbean Historians and the Preservation of Primary Sources for the History of the Region JOHN A. AARONS
List of Tables Abbreviations and Acronyms Introduction HEATHER CATEAU
Part 1: The Colonial Caribbean in Transition
1 ‘Little England’ vs ‘Great Britain’: Barbados Slavers in the Emancipation Debate HILARY MCD. BECKLES
2 No ‘Gentle Glide’ From Enslavement to Emancipation: The Post-Emancipation Labour Struggles in Tobago, 1838–1919 RITA PEMBERTON
3 The Impact of Christianity on Naming Practices in Post-Emancipation Barbados PEDRO L.V. WELCH
Part 2: Law, Justice and Empire
4 From Unicameralism to Bicameralism: Trinbago Constitutional Advances (1831–1962) BRINSLEY SAMAROO
5 “The Thorough Knowledge of the Island and All its Departments and Instruction in Political Science”: Representing the Patria in Puerto Rico’s First Elections Under Spain’s 1812 Constitution JUAN GONZÁLEZ MENDOZA
6 The Crown Is Not Welcomed: Government and Politics in British Guiana, 1953–1957 JAMES ROSE
7 Eric Williams and C.L.R. James: Intellectual Symbiosis and Political Counterpoint HUMBERTO GARCÍA-MUÑIZ
Part 3: Gendered Testimonies
8 Bridget Brereton’s Gendered Historiography of the Caribbean GELIEN MATTHEWS
9 Egodocuments by Women as Sources for Caribbean History: Three Cases from Late Colonial Suriname ROSEMARIJN HOEFTE
10 Imperial First Lady of Trinidad, Lady Rachel Hamilton-Gordon 1865–1870 DANE MORTON-GITTENS
11 Slavery, Gender and the Historiography of the French Antilles, 1635–1848 BERNARD MOITT
Part 4: Engendering History: Social and Political Life in the Caribbean
12 Gender and Protest at Morant Bay and in the Post-Emancipation Caribbean GAD HEUMAN
13 Inclusion/Exclusion: Women, Citizenship and Political Franchise in Early Twentieth-Century Trinidad and Tobago RHODA REDDOCK
14 Gender and Nation-Building in Barbados MARY CHAMBERLAIN
15 Ascent to Leadership: Women and the National Union of Public Workers of Barbados, 1975–1995 RICHARD A. GOODRIDGE
Part 5: Race Relations in the Caribbean: Contested Narratives
16 “Passing for White” in Bahamian Society During the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries GAIL SAUNDERS
17 It Featured a Gymkhana? Conflicting Identities in the Early Years of the Modern Crop Over Festival MARCIA BURROWES
18 Contesting Narratives of Trinidad and Tobago’s History: The Contribution of Bridget Brereton and an Exploration of the Syrian/Lebanese Narrative FIONA ANN RAJKUMAR
Part 6: History Matters: The Historian and Her Craft
19 Bridget Brereton and the Narratives of Modern Trinidad: An Assessment of Three Volumes MICHAEL TOUSSAINT
20 Called to Action: Caribbean Historians and the Preservation of Primary Sources for the History of the Region JOHN A. AARONS
Selected Bibliography Contributors Index
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