Paradise and Plantation: Tourism and Culture in the Anglophone Caribbean

Paradise and Plantation: Tourism and Culture in the Anglophone Caribbean

by Ian Gregory Strachan
Paradise and Plantation: Tourism and Culture in the Anglophone Caribbean

Paradise and Plantation: Tourism and Culture in the Anglophone Caribbean

by Ian Gregory Strachan

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Overview

"It is hard to ignore the hotels. They rise like mammoths of iron and concrete above the homes, the office buildings, the trees of New Providence, island of my birth." So begins Ian Strachan’s history of the idea of the Caribbean as paradise. The modern image of the Bahamas as a carefree tourist oasis has its origins in much earlier cultural mythology: the first colonizers conceptualized the Caribbean as a place beyond time, beyond the real, and the region produced profit seemingly without work. Yet an Edenic experience was made possible only by the existence of the plantation—the very opposite of paradise for the Amerindians, whose homeland was colonized, and for those brought as slaves.

Examining poetry, plays, novels, travelogues, magazine ads, postcards, posters, brochures, stamps, popular songs, paintings, and illustrations, Paradise and Plantation presents telling links between the myth of a Caribbean paradise and colonial ideologies and economics. Strachan considers the cultural, economic, and social effects of tourism’s "brochure discourse" in the modern Caribbean, specifically in the Bahamas, and he enriches his discussion with a fascinating exploration of the ways postcolonial Caribbean writers such as V. S. Naipaul, Derek Walcott, Paule Marshall, Jamaica Kincaid, and Michelle Cliff have responded to the paradise-plantation dichotomy.

The conspicuous disparity between the Caribbean’s reputation as paradise and the stark social, economic, and political realities of the region is not news. Ian Strachan’s genealogy of the paradise-plantation myth goes far beyond the established discourse in paradise studies, however, providing a new and interdisciplinary approach to further the discussion.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780813921464
Publisher: University of Virginia Press
Publication date: 01/29/2003
Series: New World Studies
Pages: 328
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.10(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Ian Gregory Strachan is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth. He is cofounder of the Bahamas Association for Cultural Studies and author of the novel God’s Angry Babies and the plays Black Crab’s Tragedy, Diary of Souls, and No Seeds in Babylon.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrationsviii
Prefaceix
Introduction: Paradise Discourse1
1Paradise and Imperialism17
2Caribbean Wasteland51
3Paradise Is Plantation?92
4Naipaul's "Garden of Hell"149
5Walcott's Postcolonial Adam192
6World out of Time224
Conclusion: The True History of Paradise261
Notes269
Bibliography291
Index311
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