In this original and compelling book, Mary Chamberlain explores
the nature and meaning of migration for Barbadians who migrated to
Britain and elsewhere. It is a unique oral and social history,
based on life-story interviews across three or more generations of
Barbadian families. Locating migration within the contemporary
debate on modernity, Narratives of Exile and Return highlights the
continuing role of migration in shaping the culture and history of
Barbados. But it does more by providing post-modern theorizing with
concrete national and ethnic settings.
Chamberlain investigates the power of social and individual
memory in recalling and recounting experience, and in molding and
interpreting culture. It reveals the vitality of family dynamics
and values in fashioning life courses and the ways in which these
are transmitted and transformed across the generations. It analyzes
how the "Mother Country" was encountered and incorporated, and how
the continuing presence of the Caribbean contributes to the
identities of those born or brought up in Britain.
In reclaiming these narratives of exile and return, this book
challenges and exposes, in an exciting and innovative way, those
orthodox views that explain Caribbean migration through the labor
demands of international capital or the vagaries of the home
economy. Accompanied in Part II by the edited transcripts of three
generations of five Barbadian families, Narratives of Exile and
Return makes a pioneering contribution to studies of migration and
to the social history of the Caribbean. It reaches to the heart of
the migrant experience and is a fitting tribute to the power of
oral testimony as historical source.
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