Farnham, England ; Burlington, VT : Ashgate, c2009.
Holdings
Details
Description
xv, 194 p., [2] p. of plates : ill. (some col.), maps, music; 24 cm.
Summary
"Marie-Galante is a small island situated in the Caribbean to the south of Guadeloupe. The majority of Marie-Galantais are descendants of the slave era, though a few French settlers also occupy the island. Along with its neighbours Guadeloupe and Martinique, Marie-Galante forms an official departement of France. Marie-Galante historically has never been an independent polity. Marie-Galantais express sentiments of being 'deux fois colonise', or twice colonized, concomitant with their sense of insularity from a global organization of place. Dr Ron Emoff translates this pervasive sense of displacement into the concept of the 'non-nation'. Musical practices on the island provide Marie-Galantais with a means of re-connecting with other significant distant places. Many Marie-Galantais display a 'split-subjectivity', embracing an African heritage, a French association and a Caribbean regionalism. This book is unique, in part, with regard to its treatment of a particular mode of self-consciousness, expressed musically, on a virtually forgotten Caribbean island. The book also combines literary, narrative, historical and musical sources to theorize a postcolonial subsurreal in the French Antilles."--Jacket.
Includes bibliographical references (p. [181]-188) and index.
Contents
Introduction : an out-of-the-way island -- Tradition and official versions of history -- Aimé Césaire, language, and the subsurreal -- Gwo ka drumming and claiming a sound place -- Being/not being French : Kadril -- Mayoleur, the festival stage, Rastafarianism -- Conclusion : histories within histories.