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Remnants of conquest : the Island Caribs and their visitors, 1877-1998 / Peter Hulme.

By: Publication details: Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2000.Description: 371 pages : illustrations, maps ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0198112157
  • 9780198112150
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Remnants of conquest.; Remnants of conquest.DDC classification:
  • 972.9841/004974 21
  • 809.93355 21
LOC classification:
  • F2001 .H85 2000
Other classification:
  • 73.06
  • IJ 50002
  • RV 50592
Online resources:
Contents:
Visiting the Caribs -- Northern hunter and dusky Carib : Frederick Ober and his followers (1877-1907) -- The administrator's fiat : Henry Hesketh Bell and the establishment of the Carib Reserve (1900-1921) -- Narrating the Carib war : Douglas Taylor and the struggle over history (1930-1940) -- The return of the native : Jean Rhys and the Caribs (1936) -- Travellers and other transients : Patrick Leigh Fermor and his followers (1945-1998).
Summary: "In 1877 a US ornithologist stumbled across a small indigenous Caribbean population, the Caribs, still living in a remote part of the small island of Dominica. His account of his stay among the Caribs started a trickle of visitors which grew to a steady stream and is now in the full flood of mass tourism. Remnants of Conquest offers an account and analysis of these visitors' writings as they struggle to understand the way of life of a twentieth-century indigenous community, inhabitants of a postcolonial world." "The visitors who have followed the ornithologist's footsteps include the novelist Jean Rhys, who was fulfilling a childhood ambition, a colonial official who expected to meet Red Indians in warpaint, a British naval officer who bombarded the Reserve with starshells, and an anthropologist who settled on the island with a Carib woman." "Through this close focus on a small place extensively written about, Remnants of Conquest raises crucial questions about postcolonial perceptions of indigeneity."--Jacket.
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Books Books OCLC Data Rare Books Floor Available 0000000009111

Includes bibliographical references (pages 334-362) and index.

Visiting the Caribs -- Northern hunter and dusky Carib : Frederick Ober and his followers (1877-1907) -- The administrator's fiat : Henry Hesketh Bell and the establishment of the Carib Reserve (1900-1921) -- Narrating the Carib war : Douglas Taylor and the struggle over history (1930-1940) -- The return of the native : Jean Rhys and the Caribs (1936) -- Travellers and other transients : Patrick Leigh Fermor and his followers (1945-1998).

"In 1877 a US ornithologist stumbled across a small indigenous Caribbean population, the Caribs, still living in a remote part of the small island of Dominica. His account of his stay among the Caribs started a trickle of visitors which grew to a steady stream and is now in the full flood of mass tourism. Remnants of Conquest offers an account and analysis of these visitors' writings as they struggle to understand the way of life of a twentieth-century indigenous community, inhabitants of a postcolonial world." "The visitors who have followed the ornithologist's footsteps include the novelist Jean Rhys, who was fulfilling a childhood ambition, a colonial official who expected to meet Red Indians in warpaint, a British naval officer who bombarded the Reserve with starshells, and an anthropologist who settled on the island with a Carib woman." "Through this close focus on a small place extensively written about, Remnants of Conquest raises crucial questions about postcolonial perceptions of indigeneity."--Jacket.

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