Diasporic Identity

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African diaspora identity formation
African Jamaicans
African Trinidadians
Afro-Caribbean studies
Anthology
Babylon
Caribbean Literature
Caribbean Workers
Carnival Festivities
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Category=JHMC
Censorship
Chomsky's Propaganda Model
Chomsky’s Propaganda Model
Conscious Pariahs
Critical Geopolitics
Cultural Identity
cultural memory analysis
Defensive Strategy
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ethnonationalism
Global Soul
identity politics research
Indian Trinidadians
Instrumental Identifications
International Corporate Elites
Intricate View
Jamaican Identity
Literature
Milans Del Bosch
Minority Nationalism
National Identity
Overcrowded Barracoon
Racial Politics
Rastafari Identity
Rastafari social movements
Rastaman Vibration
Royal Palms
Rum Shop
Spanish Media
transnational migration theory
Trinidad
Trinidad Carnival
West Indian Nation
White Supremacist System
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805896749
  • Weight: 136g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Mar 2002
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This special issue begins with an analysis of the pros and cons of freedom of the human condition achieved by West Indians' ability to have multiple identifications--to "play the field," yet sustain a strong personal, participatory national identity. Next the ties that bind Africans together are discussed, such as common blood lines, common ethno-cultural experience, common collective memory, and common African origins. The third article explores the complex relationships among diasporic identity home, and marginality in the context of Rastafari philosophy and practice, followed by an article that views the formation of the uniquely Afro-Jamaican identity of "Colón Man" through oppositional narratives in Michael Thelwell's The Harder They Come. The issue concludes with a discussion of the geopolitics of identity through the popular literature, censorship, and the Spanish Media.

Anton L. Allahar (Edited by)