Contact and clash, amalgamation and accommodation, resistance
and change have marked the history of the Caribbean islands. It is
a unique region where people under the stress of slavery had to
improvise, invent and literally create forms of human association
through which their pasts and the symbolic interpretation of their
present could be structured.Caribbean Transformations is divided
into three major parts, each preceded by a brief introductory
chapter. Part One begins with a look at the African antecedents of
the Caribbean, then discusses slavery and the plantation system.
Two chapters deal with slavery and forced labor in Puerto Rico and
the history of a Puerto Rican plantation. Part Two is concerned
with the rise of a Caribbean peasantry--the erstwhile slaves who
separated themselves from the plantation system on small plots of
land. This creative adaptation led to the growth of a class of
rural landowners producing a large part of their own subsistence
but also selling to and buying from wider markets. Mintz first
discusses the origins of reconstructed peasantries, and then
proceeds to the specifics of the origins and history of the
peasantry in Jamaica. Part Three turns to Caribbean nationhood--the
political and economic forces that affected its shaping and the
social structure of its component societies. A separate chapter
details the case of Haiti. The book ends with a critique of the
implications of Caribbean nationhood from an anthropological
perspective, stressing the ways that class, color and other social
dimensions continue to play important parts in the organization of
Caribbean societies.
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