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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents xi
- Note on Abridgment xvii
- Acknowledgments xix
- Introduction 1
-
I Becoming Jamaica
- Introduction 7
- Taíno Society 13
- Taíno Worship 17
- The First European Account of Jamaica 21
- A Spanish Settler in Jamaica 25
- The Spanish Capital 30
- Slavery in Spanish Jamaica 34
- A Description of Spanish Jamaica 36
- The Economy of Spanish Jamaica 38
- The Western Design 41
- Mountains of Gold Turned into Dross 43
- The Establishment of Maroon Society 46
-
II From English Conquest to Slave Society
- Pirate Stronghold 49
- Port Royal Destroyed 55
- White Servants 60
- The Rise of Slave Society 64
- African Music in Jamaica 68
- A Maroon Tradition 71
- Treaty between the British and the Maroons 74
- African Arrivals 78
- Spiritual Terror 84
- Two Enslaved Lives 87
- Increase and Decrease 91
- A Free Black Poet 93
- Jamaica Talk 96
- The War of 1760–1761 101
-
III Enlightenment Slavery
- Creole Society 109
- Cane and Coffee 115
- Women’s and Men’s Work under Slavery 118
- Although a Slave Me Is Born and Bred 121
- Capture and Enslavement 123
- The Black Church 126
- British Missionaries 129
- The Second Maroon War 132
- Jonkanoo 134
- Provision Grounds 140
- The Liberation War of 1831 143
- Apprenticeship and Its Conflicts 147
- An Apprentice’s Story 150
- Because of 1833 153
-
IV Colonial Freedom
- Free Villages 159
- Cholera 168
- Black Voters 171
- Religion after Slavery 174
- Indentured Workers 177
- The Morant Bay Rebellion 181
- Dear Lucy 186
- Vindicating the Race 189
- August Town Craze 192
- Anansi and the Tiger 196
- The 1907 Earthquake 199
- Traveling from Kingston to Montego Bay 203
-
V Jamaica Arise
- Life in Rural Jamaica 209
- An Amazing Island 215
- Marcus Garvey Comes to the United States 217
- Jamaica and the Great War 221
- Returning from War 224
- Self-Government for Jamaica 228
- The 1938 Rebellion 231
- Remembering the Rebellion 234
- Now We Know 241
- Cookshop Culture 244
- My Mother Who Fathered Me 248
- The Origins of Dreadlocks 253
- Pleasure Island 259
- Hurricane Charlie 262
- Jamaican East Indians 264
- Blackness and Beauty 268
- Chinese Jamaica 271
- Bauxite 274
- The West Indies Federation 279
- Rastafari and the New Nation 283
-
VI Independence and After
- A Date with Destiny 289
- The Meaning of Independence 295
- The Assets We Have 298
- Rastafari and the Coral Gardens Incident 302
- Country Boy 307
- How to Be a “Face-Man” 309
- Cancer in West Kingston 312
- Birth of the Sound System 317
- Rudie, Oh Rudie! 321
- 1968 Revisited 325
- The Visual Arts 330
- Better Mus’ Come 334
- Bob Marley’s Fame 336
- Ganja Smoking 341
- We Are Not for Sale 344
- Zig-Zag Politics and the IMF 349
- Yesterday/Today/Tomorrow 353
- Equal Rights 356
- A Helper’s Story 359
-
VII Jamaica in the Age of Neoliberalism
- Nine Months of Turmoil 363
- Seaga v. Manley 370
- Born Fi’ Dead 373
- Sunsplash 1984 376
- Walking Jewellery Store 380
- Hurricane Story, 1988 384
- Wild Gilbert 386
- Showing Skin Teeth 389
- Slackness 393
- Downtown Ladies 397
- Jamaica’s Shame 401
- Woman Time Now 406
- A Wild Ride 408
- Skin Bleaching 411
- Tragedy in Tivoli 414
- The Cell Phone and the Economy of Communication 420
- Unsustainable Development 424
- The Case for Reparations 427
- These Islands of Love and Hate 430
-
VIII Jamaicans in the World
- In the Canal Zone 435
- A Diaspora Story 442
- Going to Cuba 444
- Tropics in New York 448
- Little Brown Girl 449
- Colonization in Reverse 454
- A Farmworker in Florida 457
- Reggae and Possible Africas 462
- Canadian-Jamaican 465
- A Maid in New York City 467
- My Great Shun 471
- Homecomers 473
- Return to Jamaica 475
- Things Change 480
- Jamaica to the World 483
- Suggestions for Further Reading 487
- Acknowledgment of Copyrights and Sources 493
- Index 503
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents xi
- Note on Abridgment xvii
- Acknowledgments xix
- Introduction 1
-
I Becoming Jamaica
- Introduction 7
- Taíno Society 13
- Taíno Worship 17
- The First European Account of Jamaica 21
- A Spanish Settler in Jamaica 25
- The Spanish Capital 30
- Slavery in Spanish Jamaica 34
- A Description of Spanish Jamaica 36
- The Economy of Spanish Jamaica 38
- The Western Design 41
- Mountains of Gold Turned into Dross 43
- The Establishment of Maroon Society 46
-
II From English Conquest to Slave Society
- Pirate Stronghold 49
- Port Royal Destroyed 55
- White Servants 60
- The Rise of Slave Society 64
- African Music in Jamaica 68
- A Maroon Tradition 71
- Treaty between the British and the Maroons 74
- African Arrivals 78
- Spiritual Terror 84
- Two Enslaved Lives 87
- Increase and Decrease 91
- A Free Black Poet 93
- Jamaica Talk 96
- The War of 1760–1761 101
-
III Enlightenment Slavery
- Creole Society 109
- Cane and Coffee 115
- Women’s and Men’s Work under Slavery 118
- Although a Slave Me Is Born and Bred 121
- Capture and Enslavement 123
- The Black Church 126
- British Missionaries 129
- The Second Maroon War 132
- Jonkanoo 134
- Provision Grounds 140
- The Liberation War of 1831 143
- Apprenticeship and Its Conflicts 147
- An Apprentice’s Story 150
- Because of 1833 153
-
IV Colonial Freedom
- Free Villages 159
- Cholera 168
- Black Voters 171
- Religion after Slavery 174
- Indentured Workers 177
- The Morant Bay Rebellion 181
- Dear Lucy 186
- Vindicating the Race 189
- August Town Craze 192
- Anansi and the Tiger 196
- The 1907 Earthquake 199
- Traveling from Kingston to Montego Bay 203
-
V Jamaica Arise
- Life in Rural Jamaica 209
- An Amazing Island 215
- Marcus Garvey Comes to the United States 217
- Jamaica and the Great War 221
- Returning from War 224
- Self-Government for Jamaica 228
- The 1938 Rebellion 231
- Remembering the Rebellion 234
- Now We Know 241
- Cookshop Culture 244
- My Mother Who Fathered Me 248
- The Origins of Dreadlocks 253
- Pleasure Island 259
- Hurricane Charlie 262
- Jamaican East Indians 264
- Blackness and Beauty 268
- Chinese Jamaica 271
- Bauxite 274
- The West Indies Federation 279
- Rastafari and the New Nation 283
-
VI Independence and After
- A Date with Destiny 289
- The Meaning of Independence 295
- The Assets We Have 298
- Rastafari and the Coral Gardens Incident 302
- Country Boy 307
- How to Be a “Face-Man” 309
- Cancer in West Kingston 312
- Birth of the Sound System 317
- Rudie, Oh Rudie! 321
- 1968 Revisited 325
- The Visual Arts 330
- Better Mus’ Come 334
- Bob Marley’s Fame 336
- Ganja Smoking 341
- We Are Not for Sale 344
- Zig-Zag Politics and the IMF 349
- Yesterday/Today/Tomorrow 353
- Equal Rights 356
- A Helper’s Story 359
-
VII Jamaica in the Age of Neoliberalism
- Nine Months of Turmoil 363
- Seaga v. Manley 370
- Born Fi’ Dead 373
- Sunsplash 1984 376
- Walking Jewellery Store 380
- Hurricane Story, 1988 384
- Wild Gilbert 386
- Showing Skin Teeth 389
- Slackness 393
- Downtown Ladies 397
- Jamaica’s Shame 401
- Woman Time Now 406
- A Wild Ride 408
- Skin Bleaching 411
- Tragedy in Tivoli 414
- The Cell Phone and the Economy of Communication 420
- Unsustainable Development 424
- The Case for Reparations 427
- These Islands of Love and Hate 430
-
VIII Jamaicans in the World
- In the Canal Zone 435
- A Diaspora Story 442
- Going to Cuba 444
- Tropics in New York 448
- Little Brown Girl 449
- Colonization in Reverse 454
- A Farmworker in Florida 457
- Reggae and Possible Africas 462
- Canadian-Jamaican 465
- A Maid in New York City 467
- My Great Shun 471
- Homecomers 473
- Return to Jamaica 475
- Things Change 480
- Jamaica to the World 483
- Suggestions for Further Reading 487
- Acknowledgment of Copyrights and Sources 493
- Index 503