Islands at the Crossroads
328 pages, 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
27 B&W illustrations, including 11 maps - 9 ta
Paperback
Release Date:01 Oct 2011
ISBN:9780817356552
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Islands at the Crossroads

Migration, Seafaring, and Interaction in the Caribbean

University of Alabama Press
A long sequence of social, cultural, and political processes characterizes an ever-dynamic Caribbean history. The Caribbean Basin is home to numerous linguistic and cultural traditions and fluid interactions that often map imperfectly onto former colonial and national traditions. Although much of this contact occurred within the confines of local cultural communities, regions, or islands, they nevertheless also include exchanges between islands, and in some cases, with the surrounding continents. recent research in the pragmatics of seafaring and trade suggests that in many cases long-distance intercultural interactions are crucial elements in shaping the social and cultural dynamics of the local populations.
 
The contributors to Islands at the Crossroads include scholars from the Caribbean, the United States, and Europe who look beyond cultural boundaries and colonial frontiers to explore the complex and layered ways in which both distant and more intimate sociocultural, political, and economic interactions have shaped Caribbean societies from seven thousand years ago to recent times.
 
Contributors
Douglas V. Armstrong / Mary Jane Berman / Arie Boomert / Alistair J. Bright / Richard T. Callaghan / L. Antonio Curet / Mark W. Hauser / Corinne L. Hofman / Menno L. P. Hoogland / Kenneth G. Kelly / Sebastiaan Knippenberg / Ingrid Newquist / Isabel C. Rivera-Collazo / Reniel Rodríquez Ramos / Alice V. M. Samson / Peter E. Siegel / Christian Williamson
'This volume brings together a wide range of interesting essays that speak to the concept of Caribbean interactions. A valuable contribution to Caribbean archaeology, it provides a provocative framework for understanding the nature of Caribbean relationships that undermines the insular nature of traditional archaeological work in the region.' —New West Indian Guide
 
Focusing on human relationships and the interactions between various groups and subgroups, this collection of essays expouding on the nature and history of the Caribbean peoples and geography gives insight into its changing social climate over time.'  —Book News
Curet and Hauser’s volume provides a sophisticated assessment of both Caribbean history and prehistory through the lens of interaction—the consequential ways that different groups of people intersected with one another on different scales and at different times from 5000 BC to the recent past. The individual papers address this overarching theme and present new data and interpretations. It’s an important collection for Caribbeanists, archaeologists in the Caribbean Basin, and archaeologists working in the Colonial Americas.’ —Samuel M. Wilson, author of The Archaeology of the Caribbean
L. Antonio Curet is an assistant curator in the Department of Anthropology at the Field Museum; the author of Caribbean Paleodemography: Population, Culture History, and Sociopolitical Processes in Ancient Puerto Rico; and coeditor, with Lisa M. Stringer, of Tibes: People, Power, and Ritual at the Center of the Cosmos. Mark W. Hauser is an assistant professor in the Department of Anthropology at Northwestern University and author of An Archaeology of Black Markets: Local Ceramics and Economies in Eighteenth-Century Jamaica.

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