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Böcker utgivna av Ian Randle Publishers,Jamaica

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  • - Theories of the Postcolonail State
     
    486,-

    Examines the vast body of radical work and thought on the post-colonial Caribbean state. It focuses on the period after the Second World War. The survey of political thought in this collection is divided into four sections: theories of the post-colonial state, theorizing post-colonial citizenship, Caribbean regionalism, and political culture.

  • - The Colonial State to Caribbean Internationalisms
     
    506,-

    Uncovers, collects and reflects on the wealth of political thought produced in the Caribbean region. It traces the political thought of the Caribbean from the debate between Bartolome de Las Casas and Gines de Sepulveda on the categorization of Native people in the New World, through the Haitian Revolution, to the immediate aftermath of the Second World War.

  • av Erna Brodber
    256,-

    Engaging and absorbing, yet at once both sobering and triumphant, The World is a High Hill demonstrates the multifaceted nature of the Jamaican woman, faced with all the trials the high hill of the world presents, at times a steeper climb for some more than for others. The stories are preceded with a foreword by Verene Shepherd and close with an interview with the author by Carolyn Cooper.

  • - A Manual for Caribbean Users
    av Merle Hodge
    380,-

    For Caribbean English-speakers, writing "proper" English is often a challenge since we are in fact Creole-speakers. In The Knots in English, Merle Hodge capitalises on her 25 years of teaching experience to break down the differences between English grammar and Creole grammar and provide users with a key tool in improving language proficiency.

  • - Masculinities in Jamaican Dancehall
    av Donna Hope
    396,-

    Explores Jamaican masculinity through the male-dominated dancehall space that is at once a celebration of the marginalized poor and also a challenge to social inequality. Using the major masculine debates that are articulated in dancehall music and culture, Donna Hope explores the transition of Jamaican masculinity in the 21st century.

  • - A Century of Ideas about Culture and Identity, Nation and Society
     
    490,-

    For more than a century, Caribbean intellectuals have created a substantial body of work expressing their ideas about culture, identity and society in the region - ideas that have contributed to the development of a distinctive Caribbean civilisation. This collection shows some of the variety, commonalities, contrasts and connections in the ideas of these intellectuals.

  • - The Constitutional Decolonization of the Eastern Caribbean
    av Raphael Cox-Alomar
    380,-

    Presents a comprehensive study of the decisive 5-year period between 1962 and 1967 which witnessed the unfolding of an intense decolonization dialogue between Britain and its Eastern Caribbean possessions at the height of the Cold War. In this work, Raphael Cox Alomar tests the conceptual boundaries of the very meaning of decolonization as a socio-political phenomenon.

  • - Closing the Circle of Independence
    av Duke Pollard
    490,-

    What do we really know about the Caribbean Court of Justice? The vexed issue of the Court's establishment has been the subject of much debate but how much of this debate is informed by the facts? This new book bridges the information gap and provides an authoritative guide to the composition, function and administration of this Court.

  • av Easton Lee
    240,-

    The wisdom the lore and the teachings of the people of "old" Jamaica, people of multiple origins, as well as that of contemporary times, are captured in a "hundred and one" poems.

  • - Bridgetown Barbados 1680-1834
    av Pedro Welch
    366,-

    This is one of the first specialised treatments of an Anglophone Caribbean port-town by a contemporary historian. Having adeptly mined the existing archival data and statistics on Bridgetown, Pedro Welch shares with readers information that contributes immensely to our understanding of the way slave societies functioned in the Caribbean.

  • - Text and Readings
     
    366,-

    An introductory text for students of Caribbean Politics. It provides a broad historical sweep from the slave era to the contemporary period, characterised by issues of structural adjustments and globalisation, and in between, the years of worker revolt and protest. The text is structured and presented around a number of core concepts used to analyse Caribbean politics and political systems.

  • - Jock Campbell - The Booker Reformer in British Guiana 1934-1966
    av Clem Seecharan
    580,-

    Examines Jock Campbell's role in the shaping of British Guiana towards the end of Empire. Campbell was a reformer whose Fabian social beliefs drove him to secure major benifits for sugar workers in the 1950s and `60s. Clem Seecharan explores the fascinating interplay between Campbell's programme of reforms and the doctrinaire Marxism of Guyana's charismatic politician, Cheddi Jagan.

  • av Phillips Sherlock
    476,-

  • - Making of a Democratic Society in Barbados - From Clement Payne to Owen Arthur
    av Hilary Beckles
    350,-

    The remaking of colonial Barbados as a postmodern nation state has its political roots buried deep within the past. In Chattel House Blues, Hilary Beckles sets out to rewrite modern Barbadian history by centring the evolution of the nation in centuries of grassroots struggle.

  • - A Social History of West Indians in the First World War
    av Glenford Howe
    350,-

    "World War One, 'The Great War', had major social, economic, psychological and political implications for colonial peoples. Throughout the colonial world, people were called upon and many eagerly volunteered to defend the very nations and institutions which kept them in subjugation and robbed them of their identities. Glenford Howe presents the incredible and ironically triumphant story of the West Indian soldiers in World War One - a story which had previously remained largely untold through the intentional design of the early British colonial historians and by efforts to belittle the contribution of West Indians as that of misguided patriots lacking any sense of race and class consciousness. The focus of the study is the examination of the processes and politics surrounding the participation of Blacks in the war. This gripping account reveals the daily problems of army life for West Indian recruits, the internal intricacies of army administration, the functions performed by West Indian soldiers and their difficult experiences after the war. But in so doing, Dr Howe discovers a series of fascinating contexts within which to examine the larger issues of slavery, race and class, culture, gender and social structure as well as the social psychology of colonialism. "

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