Investigates the relatively little-studied but growing field of the experiences of East Indians in the Caribbean from their arrival in 1838 to the end of indentureship in 1920. By utilizing an analytical perspective offered by writers on the subject of the subaltern, this work departs from the historical approach and offers a fresh interpretation.
"Indo-Caribbean Indenture" investigates the relatively little-studied but growing field of the experiences of East Indians in the Caribbean from their arrival in 1838 to the end of indentureship in 1920. It places the indenture period into a larger socio-economic framework of imperialism, the post-slavery attempt to solve the labour shortage and the gender-relations which overarched the whole transaction in human bodies. By utilizing a new analytical perspective offered by current writers on the subject of the subaltern, the work departs from the usual historical approach and offers a fresh interpretation. The work will be of particular interest to historians, sociologists and social scientists who focus on the Caribbean, migration, ethnicity, gender studies, peasant resistance, labour history and cultural continuity and change.
Lomarsh Roopnarine is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Virgin Islands, St Croix.
"A fresh interpretation of cultural change among the immigrant population particularly with regard to retention of cultural practice, the shedding of obsolete beliefs and the creation of new modes of adaptation to the New World." - Brinsley Samaroo, Professor Emeritus, Department of History, University of the West Indies, Trinidad and Tobago."
"A fresh interpretation of cultural change among the immigrant population, particularly with regard to retention of cultural practice, the shedding of obsolete beliefs and the creation of new modes of adaptation to the New World." -- Brinsley Samaroo