Results for 'Anglophone Caribbean'

971 found
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  1.  37
    Can We Care for Aging Persons without Worsening Global Inequities? The Case of Long-Term Care Worker Migration from the Anglophone Caribbean.Jeremy Snyder & Valorie A. Crooks - 2017 - Public Health Ethics 10 (3).
    The international migration of health workers, including long-term care workers for aging populations, contributes to a shortage of these workers in many parts of the world. In the Anglophone Caribbean, LCW shortages and the migration of nurses to take on LCW positions abroad threaten the health of local populations and widen global inequities in health. Many responses have been proposed to address the international migration of health workers generally, including making it more difficult for these workers to emigrate (...)
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  2.  9
    Digital media, disability and development in the Anglophone Caribbean-social and ethical considerations.Floyd Morris - 2020 - Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society 18 (3):357-375.
    Purpose In 2006, the United Nations established the convention on the rights of persons with disabilities. Simultaneously, the UN has adopted the sustainable development goals in 2015 and the 17 goals must be achieved by member states by 2030. Regionally, countries within the Caribbean community have formulated the Kingston Accord and the Declaration of Petion Ville. Both of these two instruments outlined a regional framework on the issue of persons with disabilities. The media, therefore, have axiological roles to play (...)
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  3.  24
    Caribbean Classics - (E.) Greenwood Afro-Greeks. Dialogues between Anglophone Caribbean Literature and Classics in the Twentieth Century. Pp. xiv + 298. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010. Cased, £55, US$99. ISBN: 978-0-19-957524-4. [REVIEW]James V. Morrison - 2011 - The Classical Review 61 (1):291-294.
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  4.  14
    Women and gender in Caribbean (English-speaking) historiography.Bridget Brereton - 2019 - Clio 50:211-240.
    En 1974, Lucille Mathurin Mair soutient sa thèse de doctorat à l’université des Indes occidentales (UWI) de Jamaïque. Son travail sera publié une première fois en 2006 sous le titre A Historical Study of Women in Jamaica, 1655-1844 ; il s’agit du premier long ouvrage d’histoire sur la vie des femmes caribéennes. En 1993, Verene Shepherd organise un colloque, toujours à l’université des Indes occidentales de Jamaïque, qui donnera lieu à une collection d’essais, publiés en 1995 sous le titre Engendering (...)
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  5.  21
    Irreparable Evil: An Essay in Moral and Reparatory History.David Scott - 2024 - Columbia University Press.
    What was distinctive about the evil of the transatlantic slave trade and New World slavery? In what ways can the present seek to rectify such historical wrongs, even while recognizing that they lie beyond repair? Irreparable Evil explores the legacy of slavery and its moral and political implications, offering a nuanced intervention into debates over reparations. David Scott reconsiders the story of New World slavery in a series of interconnected essays that focus on Jamaica and the Anglophone Caribbean. (...)
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  6.  16
    The New Woman and ‘The Dusky Strand’: The Place of Feminism and Women's Literature in Early Jamaican Nationalism.Leah Rosenberg - 2010 - Feminist Review 95 (1):45-63.
    This essay analyzes the prominent role played by first wave feminism and by women writers between 1898-1903 as the Jamaica Times articulated a broad-based, middle class nationalism and launched a campaign to establish a Jamaican national literature. Largely overlooked, this archival material is significant because it suggests a subtle yet significant modification of anglophone Caribbean feminist, literary and nationalist historiography: first wave feminism was not introduced to Jamaica exclusively through black nationalist organizations in the late nineteenth and early (...)
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  7.  19
    Community in ‘Global’ Academies: The Critical Positioning of ‘Meta-Francophone’ Caribbeanists.Mary Gallagher - 2014 - Paragraph 37 (2):290-307.
    Caribbeanists working on the Francophone Caribbean within the Anglophone academy are perhaps particularly well placed to bring into focus the linguistic and cultural losses of the dislocations and relocations of High Capitalism. Although our object of study should facilitate critical insights into the fundamental linguistic and cultural indifference and irresponsibility of capitalist extraction models and into what is at stake politically and ethically in contemporary versions of those profiteering models, the commercialist reductionism currently formatting not just our own (...)
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  8.  62
    Between Stephen Lloyd and Esteban Yo-eed: Locating Jamaica Through Cuba.Faith Smith - 2012 - Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 20 (1):22-38.
    In their oft-cited manifesto, the Martinican Creolists exhort Caribbean people to forego their continuing allegiances to the “mythical shores” of various old worlds, and to affirm instead the “alluvial Creoleness” that binds (or that ought to bind) them to each other, and to other communities across the globe with a similar plantation history: “Neither Europeans, nor Africans, nor Asians, we proclaim ourselves Creoles; “[the Creole language] is the initial means of communication of our deep self, or our collective unconscious, (...)
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  9.  11
    Caribbean society was forged in a colonial context of brutal encounters between various European powers, the indigenous peoples of the region, and the Africans who were kidnapped, shipped across the Atlantic, and enslaved on plantations in the New World. Later arrivals were the East Indians, Chi-nese, and Portuguese who came as indentured servants and a Jewish, Syrian.English Caribbean - 2011 - In Godfrey Baldacchino (ed.), Island songs: a global repertoire. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press. pp. 1.
  10.  14
    Caribbean island culture is an amalgam of different languages, religions, and.Spanish Caribbean - 2011 - In Godfrey Baldacchino (ed.), Island songs: a global repertoire. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press. pp. 19.
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  11.  23
    Islands are worthwhile subjects for postcolonial study, and yet cultural imperialism has had different impacts in island settings where there was no indigenous population. Postcolonialism has affected territories that are not postcolonial in that they remain, often voluntarily, in a formal, but also problematic and deeply ambiguous, dependent relationship with an overseas.French Caribbean - 2011 - In Godfrey Baldacchino (ed.), Island songs: a global repertoire. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press. pp. 37.
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  12.  11
    Contemporary Caribbean writing and Deleuze: literature between postcolonialism and post-continental philosophy.Lorna Burns - 2012 - New York: Continuum.
    Introduction: How newness enters the world -- Surrealism and the Caribbean: a curious line of resemblance -- Writing back to the colonial event: Derek Walcott and Wilson Harris -- Édouard Glissant's poetics of the chaosmos -- Postcolonial literature as health: Robert Antoni and Nalo Hopkinson.
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  13.  7
    Caribbean Confederations as Relationalities.Yolanda Martínez-San Miguel - 2024 - Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 32 (1):27-48.
    In this essay, I connect my work on Archipelago studies with Édouard Glissant’s notions of relationality and Caribbean confederations to formulate what I denominate as the erotics of archipelagic thinking. My main goal is to share my process of thinking with and through Glissant’s work to focus on a series of theoretical gestures that have allowed me to propose modes of reading literary depictions of Caribbean con/federations that go beyond the binary opposition between colonialism and nationalism. I am (...)
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  14.  51
    Anglophone Historicisms.Mark Bevir & Naomi Choi - 2015 - Journal of the Philosophy of History 9 (3):327-346.
    _ Source: _Volume 9, Issue 3, pp 327 - 346 This paper explores the place of historicism in Anglophone and especially analytic philosophy. Analytic philosophy arose as part of a general modernist revolt against the developmental historicisms of the nineteenth century with their faith in progress. Modernism inspired more formal approaches to knowledge, philosophy, and the human sciences. It is, however, a mistake to assume the rise of modernism and analytic philosophy left no space for historicism. Three main traditions (...)
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  15.  70
    Caribbean Heat Threatens Health, Well-being and the Future of Humanity: Table 1.Cheryl C. Macpherson & Muge Akpinar-Elci - 2015 - Public Health Ethics 8 (2):196-208.
    Climate change has substantial impacts on public health and safety, disease risks and the provision of health care, with the poor being particularly disadvantaged. Management of the associated health risks and changing health service requirements requires adequate responses at local levels. Health-care providers are central to these responses. While climate change raises ethical questions about its causes, impacts and social justice, medicine and bioethics typically focus on individual patients and research participants rather than these broader issues. We broaden this focus (...)
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  16.  37
    Caribbean Development from Colonialism to Post-neoliberal Multipolarity.Dennis C. Canterbury - 2023 - CLR James Journal 29 (1):91-116.
    Arguably, Caribbean development has evolved through three distinct historical periods in international political economy and currently must find its way in a fourth—the new multipolar world order. The hitherto three periods were characterized by a system of multipolar colonial imperial empires, bipolar cold war with neocolonialism, and unipolar neoliberalism. The purpose here is to unlock the door to critical thinking on Caribbean social, political, and economic policies for the new multipolarity. The region must dial back its blind pursuit (...)
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  17.  1
    Decolonizing Caribbean Modernity in advance.Derefe Kimarley Chevannes - forthcoming - Philosophy and Global Affairs.
    The Caribbean is an undertheorized region within canonical political theory. This paper critically uncovers the West Indies as the inaugural site of modernity within the Americas. If it is European modernity that introduces into human existence fundamental markers of social identity, such as the historical nexus between race and class with devastating effects, then contemporary racial problems, including anti-black racism in the postcolonial world, can only be remedied by taking seriously the postcolonial Caribbean. In doing so, this paper (...)
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  18. The Promise of Caribbean Philosophy: How It Can Cpntribute to a "New Dialogic" in Philosophy.Jennifer Lisa Vest - 2005 - Caribbean Studies 33 (2):3-34.
    The Caribbean is a site where multiple cultures, peoples, waysof thinking and acting have come together and where new formsof philosophy are emerging. The promise of Caribbean philoso-phy lays in its ability to give shape to an intellectual tradition which is both true to and beneficial to Caribbean peoples whilesimultaneously being provocative enough to engage wisdom-seekers of various geographies and identities. I argue that onlyby pursuing a “New Dialogic” which engages the philosophicaltraditions of Africans, African Americans, and (...)
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  19.  18
    Caribbean Philosophy and Me: Autobiographical Reflections.Paget Henry - 2020 - Journal of World Philosophies 5 (2):145-154.
    This paper is an account of the author’s emergence as an Afro-Caribbean philosopher, although formally trained and still working in the discipline of sociology. In order to complete this account, I made use of an Akan theory of the self and the circular path of its development, in order to integrate the details of the influences, major phases, and changes leading to my emergence as a Caribbean philosopher, as well as some of the academic challenges to the field (...)
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  20.  9
    The Caribbean Space in Rastro de sal by Arabella Salaverry.Diana Martínez Alpízar - 2023 - ÍSTMICA Revista de la Facultad de Filosofía y Letras 1 (32):125-144.
    El presente trabajo analiza la construcción del espacio caribeño en la novela Rastro de sal de la escritora costarricense Arabella Salaverry. Este espacio se aborda desde dos perspectivas específicas: una, vinculada con la representación general del espacio caribeño. Este análisis se centra en tres relaciones concretas: conectividad/aislamiento, naturaleza/cultura, centro/periferia. La segunda perspectiva se interesa más bien en los espacios domésticos y su interacción con los personajes femeninos, a partir de las relaciones libertad/prisión e interior/exterior. Se concluye que, en Rastro de (...)
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  21.  55
    Caribbean and African Appropriations of "The Tempest".Rob Nixon - 1987 - Critical Inquiry 13 (3):557-578.
    The era from the late fifties to the early seventies was marked in Africa and the Caribbean by a rush of newly articulated anticolonial sentiment that was associated with the burgeoning of both international back consciousness and more localized nationalist movements. Between 1957 and 1973 the vast majority of African and the larger Caribbean colonies won their independence; the same period witnessed the Cuban and Algerian revolutions, the latter phase of the Kenyan “Mau Mau” revolt, the Katanga crisis (...)
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  22.  38
    Caribbean Marxism After the Neoliberal and Linguistic Turns.Hilbourne A. Watson - 2004 - CLR James Journal 10 (1):167-199.
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  23.  12
    Imaginary, a Caribbean Battle Song.Noémie Auzas - 2011 - Iris 32:169-177.
    Within the Caribbean literature, the imaginary—a very often defined notion—is presented in a new light by the fictional and theoretic thought of Patrick Chamoiseau. The imaginary dimension can’t remain something abstract and essential full of invariants. Chamoiseau is mistrustful of the mythical imaginary, however he doesn’t put an end to it but he opens a literary space where everything has to be created. In Chamoiseau’s works, the imaginary dimension is of the highest importance in an ideological battle-field where the (...)
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  24.  18
    Caribbean Reflections.Paget Henry - 2018 - CLR James Journal 24 (1):25-28.
  25.  53
    Caribbean Creolization: Reflections on the Cultural Dynamics of Language, Literature, and Identity.Aletha D. Stahl - 1999 - Substance 28 (3):164-166.
  26. Revistas Caribbean Studies y Quorum Academico.PublicacióN. Telos - 2012 - Telos (Venezuela) 14 (1):153-154.
     
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  27. Between Caribbean and Chinese Economic Development in advance.Yue Qiu & Paget Henry - forthcoming - CLR James Journal.
    This paper compares the very different results of the use of the theories of Arthur Lewis in constructing the mixed economies of China and the Caribbean, the widely diverging paths these economies took in the era of neoliberal globalization, and how the two can cooperate now that China has entered its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) phase. We argue that in response to the great depression of the 1930s, both China and the Caribbean embarked on socialist alternatives to (...)
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  28. English Caribbean : when people cannot talk, they sing.Ijahnya Christian - 2011 - In Godfrey Baldacchino (ed.), Island songs: a global repertoire. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press.
     
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  29.  27
    Caribbean Male: An Endangered Species?Keisha Lindsay - 2002 - In Patricia Mohammed (ed.), Gendered realities: essays in Caribbean feminist thought. Mona, Jamaica: Centre for Gender and Development Studies. pp. 56--82.
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  30. French Caribbean : Adieu foulard, adieu madras : a sonic study in (post)colonialism.Yoko Oryu & Godfrey Baldacchino - 2011 - In Godfrey Baldacchino (ed.), Island songs: a global repertoire. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press.
     
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  31.  18
    (1 other version)The Caribbean: Can Lilliput Make It?Aaron Segal & Wallace C. Koehler - 1987 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 7 (5-6):605-614.
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  32.  49
    Subjectivity in Motion: Caribbean Women's (Dis)Articulations of Being from Fanon/Capécia to the Wonderful Adventures of Mrs. Seacole in Many Lands.Myriam J. A. Chancy - 2015 - Hypatia 30 (2):434-449.
    In this essay I show that texts by early Caribbean women writers, such as the Wonderful Adventures of Mrs. Seacole in Many Lands, reveal and resist the effects of colonial paradigms by leaving textual traces of how such paradigms can effectively be countered and overturned. I arrive at such a reading of Seacole via an analysis of Frantz Fanon's reading of Mayotte Capécia's turn-of-the-century novel, Je suis martiniquaise, in light of advances in postcolonial and feminist theory. I argue that (...)
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  33. Afro-Caribbean Philosophy.Paget Henry - 1993 - CLR James Journal 4 (1):2-11.
  34. Human Rights and Caribbean Philosophy: Implications for Teaching.Benjamin Davis - 2021 - Journal of Human Rights Practice 12 (4).
    This note on human rights practice observes that some pedagogical methods in human rights education can have the effect of making human rights violations both seem to be performed by abnormal, bad actors and seem to occur in places far away from US classrooms. This effect is not intended by instructors; a methodological corrective would be helpful to human rights education. This note provides a corrective by suggesting two practices: (1) a pedagogical emphasis on what the Martinican philosopher Édouard Glissant (...)
     
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  35. English Caribbean : when people cannot talk, they sing.Ijahnya Christian - 2011 - In Godfrey Baldacchino (ed.), Island songs: a global repertoire. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press.
     
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  36.  44
    Modern anglophone philosophy: Between the seminar room and the cold war.Bruce Kuklick - 2006 - Modern Intellectual History 3 (3):547-557.
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  37.  18
    Contemporary Anglophone African Philosophy: A Survey.Barry Hallen - 2004 - In Kwasi Wiredu (ed.), A Companion to African Philosophy. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 99--148.
    A broad survey of contemporary African philosophy on the basis of methodologies and their applications.
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  38.  32
    Caribbean piracy and youth restiveness in Niger delta: A comparative analysis.O. O. Asukwo - 2006 - Sophia: An African Journal of Philosophy 8 (1).
  39.  27
    Visiting caribbean bioethicists.Udo Schüklenk - 2012 - Developing World Bioethics 12 (2):ii-ii.
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  40.  9
    Blackening Britain: Caribbean Radicalism from Windrush to Decolonization.James G. Cantres - 2020 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Blackening Britain explores the key moments, figures, and patterns of radical black political development among Caribbean and African migrants in Britain after World War II. Ultimately, the move away from British identity and a radical, revolutionary consciousness rooted in the West Indian background was forged in the contentious space of Britain.
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  41.  2
    Ecologies of De/colonization: Embodied Caribbean Diasporic Perspectives.Anita Girvan & Astrid Vanessa Pérez Piñán - 2024 - Studies in Social Justice 18 (4):781-804.
    In this photo essay, we take readers through ecologies of de/colonization that we engage with in our creative methodology of walking and talking. As academics called upon to do equity, diversity and decolonization work in colonial institutions, we reflect on our location in lək̓ʷəŋən and W̱SÁNEĆ lands (“Victoria, BC, Canada”) and the circuits that extend to the Caribbean archipelago of our origins and families (Borikén/Puerto Rico and Jamaica). We take up the tasks of collectively reflecting on how to care (...)
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  42.  12
    Caribbean Feminism, Activist Pedagogies and Transnational Dialogues.Gabrielle Jamela Hosein - 2011 - Feminist Review 98 (1_suppl):e116-e129.
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  43. Spanish Caribbean : liquid identities.Soraya Marcano - 2011 - In Godfrey Baldacchino (ed.), Island songs: a global repertoire. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press.
     
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  44.  20
    An Ambazonian theology? A theological approach to the Anglophone crisis in Cameroon.Daniel Pratt Morris-Chapman - 2019 - HTS Theological Studies 75 (4):11.
    The last 3 years have witnessed a period of substantial volatility in Cameroon. In 2016, protests within the minority Anglophone regions against the obligatory use of French in schools triggered a period of considerable unrest, in which hundreds of people have been incarcerated and killed. Following an increased security presence in the English-speaking regions, armed groups have surfaced calling for secession – the creation of an independent nation of Ambazonia. In view of this escalating crisis, this article will investigate (...)
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  45. French Caribbean : Adieu foulard, adieu madras : a sonic study in (post)colonialism.Yoko Oryu & Godfrey Baldacchino - 2011 - In Godfrey Baldacchino (ed.), Island songs: a global repertoire. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press.
     
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  46.  15
    Agency and Afro-Caribbean Existential Discourse.Lawrence O. Bamikole - 2017 - CLR James Journal 23 (1-2):107-133.
    Paget Henry’s (1997; 2000) narratives about the domains of existence in relation to human/social agency raise interesting issues about the theory and praxis of Afro-Caribbean existential discourse. In it, even when the relationships between agency and the material, social and spiritual domains of existence were thematized differently according to the different phases of Afro-Caribbean philosophical thought, the problematic of agency among the three domains raises similar questions across the different phases of Afro-Caribbean philosophy in relation to the (...)
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  47.  16
    Journeys in Caribbean Thought: The Paget Henry Reader.Jane Anna Gordon, Lewis R. Gordon, Aaron Kamugisha & Neil Roberts (eds.) - 2016 - New York: Rowman & Littlefield International.
    For the past 30 years, Paget Henry has been one of the most articulate and creative voices in Caribbean scholarship, making seminal contributions to the study of Caribbean political economy, C.L.R. James studies, critical theory, phenomenology, and Africana philosophy. This volume includes some of his most important essays from across his remarkable career, providing an introduction to a broad range of pressing contemporary themes and to the unique mind of one of the leading Caribbean intellectuals of his (...)
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  48.  21
    Canada anglophone et québec : Les ajustements de la focale.Olivier Cote, Martin Paquet & Richard Godin - 2006 - Hermes 46:135.
    Cet article s'intéresse à la manière avec laquelle les résultats aux référendums français et néerlandais sur la Constitution européenne sont interprétés dans la presse anglo-canadienne et franco-québécoise à l'aune des récentes crises constitutionnelles. Les quotidiens ont ajusté leur « focale médiatique » en fonction de leur compréhension locale de l'événement, de sa mise en marché, de son usage politique, voire de la constitution de communautés émotionnelles. Ainsi, les journaux anglo-canadiens cantonneraient l'événement au temps très court de l'actualité quotidienne, alors que (...)
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  49.  9
    Rethinking Caribbean Difference.Patricia Mohammed - 1998 - Feminist Review 59 (1):1-5.
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  50.  22
    The Crisis of Caribbean Sociology and a Sociology of Crisis.Paget Henry - 2023 - CLR James Journal 29 (1):137-163.
    In this paper, I argue that macro-theorizing in the field of Caribbean sociology is going through a crisis of transition from the third to the fourth major period in its 100-year-old process of historical development. It is a transition from a period in which the houses of earlier Caribbean macro-theorizing in the social sciences, such as creole theory, cultural pluralism and dependency theory, were blown from the center and displaced by the simultaneous arrival of two re-colonizing intellectual hurricanes (...)
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