Race, Class, and Nationalism in the Twenty-First-Century Caribbean
Product details
- ISBN 9780820366364
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 01 Nov 2024
- Publisher: University of Georgia Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
- Language: English
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This collection of more than a dozen essays focuses on the political dynamics of race, class, and nationalism in the contemporary Caribbean. Despite the plethora of studies on nationalism in the Caribbean, few have attempted to look at the phenomenon as a political invention that does not—and cannot—serve the interests of all: how essentialist, reductive, overdetermining nationalism is a political and conceptual confusion that forever stalls the project of universal human emancipation.
Editors Scott Timcke and Shelene Gomes gather and frame chapters that, in their collective expression, help trace the process of race, class, and nationalism through the contours of a broader political, economic, and social geography. These chapters argue that notions of racial identity have changed over time, but those reformations are not independent of class rule or nationalism. By using several case studies that span the Anglo, Dutch, French, and Spanish Caribbean and focus on the development of political organizations, hardships, and ideology, each of these essays continues the struggle for liberation against elite entrenchment.
Shelene Gomes (Editor)
SHELENE GOMES is a sociocultural anthropologist at the University of the West Indies, St. Augustine, Trinidad and Tobago and 2023–24 visiting scholar in residence in anthropology at the University of Cape Town. She is the author of Cosmopolitanism from the Global South.
Scott Timcke (Editor)
SCOTT TIMCKE is a senior research associate at Research ICT Africa. He is the author of Algorithms and The End of Politics: The Shaping of Technology in 21st Century American Life and The Political Economy of Fortune and Misfortune: Prospects for Prosperity in Our Times. He is a Research Associate at the Centre for Social Change, University of Johannesburg