university of the west indies press catalogue 2010-2011
DESCRIPTION
Caribbean books, Caribbean scholarship, Caribbean contentTRANSCRIPT
Letter from the
Director
Catalogue2010–2011
ContentsNew and Forthcoming 2–18
Books in Print 19
l Caribbean Cultural Studies 19
l Caribbean History 22
l Caribbean Literature 30
l Economics 32
l Education 34
l Environmental Studies 35
l Gender Studies 36
l General Interest 38
l Legal Studies 38
l Medical Studies 39
l Political Science 40
l Psychology 42
l Sociology 42
Author Index 43–44
Title Index 45–46
Ordering Information 47–48
V i s i t o u r w e b s i t e : w w w. u w i p r e s s . c o m
Dear Friends and Colleagues:
In October 2010 the University of the West Indies Press willmark its eighteenth anniversary as a scholarly bookpublisher. Since its inception the Press has published over300 high-quality books in thirteen academic disciplinesand is particularly well known for its lists in Caribbeanhistory, Caribbean cultural studies, Caribbean literature,gender and economics. We will continue to publish inthese fields but will diversify our publishing list by addingnew titles in environmental and medical studies. In thisnew catalogue for 2010–2011, we also introduce a generalinterest category to promote four exciting trade titles withwide popular appeal: Jamaican Gold: Jamaican Sprinters,edited by Rachael Irving and Vilma Charlton; Cascade: ANovel, written by Barbara Lalla, the first work ofcontemporary fiction published by the Press; Haiti Rising:Haitian History, Culture and the Earthquake of 2010, editedby Martin Munro; and Jamaican Theatre: Highlights of thePerforming Arts in the Twentieth Century, a comprehensiveand lavish coffee-table book, written by Wycliffe andHazel Bennett.
Over the last eighteen years, UWI Press books, authorsand staff have been honoured with nearly sixty local,regional and international awards. Among them are B.W.Higman’s Jamaican Food: History, Biology, Culture, whichwas a finalist for the 2008 American Publishers Awards forProfessional and Scholarly Excellence, and MaureenWarner Lewis’s Central Africa in the Caribbean andArchibald Monteath, which both received the Gordon andSybil Lewis Prize from the Caribbean Studies Association.We will continue that tradition of publishing excellenceeven as we expand our lists in new fields.
To our authors, library and bookstore partners weextend a special thank you for your commitment to UWIPress over the years. To all, please enjoy this catalogue,which features the books we have published over the lasteighteen years, and join us as we continue to celebrate therich and diverse culture of the Caribbean.
Linda E. [email protected]
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General Interest/Medical Studies/Caribbean HistoryISBN 978-976-640-234-1 160pp 8.5 x 10US$25 PaperDecember 2010
Jamaican GoldJamaican Sprinters
Edited by Rachael Irving and Vilma Charlton
“Riddle me this, riddle me that, guess me this riddle, and perhaps not: A we run things, thingsno run we. Who could that be?” One possible answer: Jamaican sprinters.
Enquiring minds want to know: Why do Jamaicans run so fast? Usain Bolt may be the mostrecent and the most spectacular Jamaican practitioner of the art of speed, but he and Shelly-Ann Fraser stand on the shoulders of giants of both genders, heirs to a pedigree that goesback at least a hundred years to the teenaged Norman Manley and before.
For years before the explosion of “Lightning” Bolt on the Beijing Olympics track, the consistentspeediness of men and women from this small island had been the subject of serious andhumorous speculation, pride and “su-su”. What is the “gold” that is mined so consistently byJamaican sprinters that permits the little country to claim a place among the top five countries,measured in terms of medals per capita of population, in almost every Olympics since theSecond World War – and all on the basis of athletics, mostly the sprints (400 metres andunder)?
Can science explain it? Does the touchy area of genetics – even though, scientifically speaking,there’s no such thing as “race” – explain it? For instance, all the current world record holdersfor the sprints – and most of the former for the past fifty years or so – have been born in theAmericas, descendants of slaves of West African lineage. Is running fast “in the blood”, so tospeak? Or is it as simple as the varieties of yam (twenty-two at last count) to be found on thehills of Jamaica and in the stomachs of its people?
Behind the simple tales of the tape are theories and questions that have attracted fourteenspecialists from a range of disciplines, from biochemistry to physiology, from genetics topsychiatry, each with an insight, a piece of the puzzle. Jamaican Gold presents research andargument, history and biography – and much more – for the specialist and the sports fan, forthe academic and the coach, in one attractive, easy-to-read volume, packed with photographsand illustrations, including a special section of memorable photos of the heroes of yesteryearand today.
With Jamaican Gold to hand, the London Olympics will be just as thrilling, and you’ll becloser to answering the question: Why do those Jamaicans run so fast?
Rachael Irving is Research Fellow in the Department of Basic Medical Sciences, Faculty ofMedical Sciences, University of the West Indies, Mona, Jamaica. She is a member of theInternational Centre for East African Running Science and the American College of SportsMedicine.
Vilma Charlton is Lecturer at the Institute of Education, University of the West Indies,Mona, Jamaica. She is a physical education lecturer, an Olympian and President of theOlympians Association of Jamaica.
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General Interest/Caribbean FictionISBN 978-976-640-233-4308pp 6 x 9US$18 PaperSeptember 2010
O F R E L A T E D I N T E R E S T
Deconstruction,Imperialism and theWest Indian Novel
Glyne A. Griffith
978-976-640-012-5US$18 (s) Paper
Out of Order!
Anthony Winkler andWhite West IndianWritingKim Robinson-Walcott
978-976-640-172-6US$27 (s) Paper
Philosophy in theWest Indian Novel
Earl McKenzie
978-976-640-215-0US$22 (s) Paper
CascadeA Novel
Barbara Lalla
“Do not go gentle into that good night.” I write it in blood on the walls of my mind.
A guesthouse in Jamaica’s mountains offers the ideal retreat for elderly friends weary ofchanges that have transformed their city, and a plan takes shape to retire together in thecountry house overlooking the sea. Terrorized by gunmen in their Kingston home, however,Ellie and Dan relocate to Trinidad instead, splintering off from the group to join theirdaughter’s family, yet keeping in close contact with Dan’s sister, whose stepson will run thehome. Against the development of Cascade, under its dangerously inept manager, unfolds atale of violent intrusion and dislocation, of cold-blooded exploitation and murderousresentment.
Yet it is also a tale of love and courage persisting through physical and mental deteriorationas a brilliant and compassionate woman struggles with a disease that can wreck therelationships she treasures most. Damaged by Alzheimer’s and irrepressible by nature, Ellieproves thoroughly disruptive even within her own supportive circle. Beyond it, relocated toCascade, she becomes a witness haunted by fragments of excruciating memory. As timeovertakes the main characters, tricks of the mind intersect with actual events and with theincreasingly menacing forces that close in on the fragile Ellie.
Cascade recounts the gathering trauma of psychological dismemberment and poignant effortsto connect against a background of social turmoil. The novel engages with the challenges ofAlzheimer’s disease in a Caribbean context, where displacement, memory, identity loss andresistance remain crucial and enduring preoccupations.
Cascade is an accomplished work of fiction by a writer of obvious talent. It examines the subjectof growing old with sensitive honesty, through the stories of three main characters. Elliesuccumbs to Alzheimer’s disease, her husband Dan suffers slow physical debilitation even ashis mental faculties remain sharp, and Dan’s sister’s Rosemarie, though still sound in body andmind, finds her freedom impaired by the selfishness and cruelty of younger relatives.
“The author skilfully delineates the separate characters through the nuances of their speechand memories, and draws a poignant portrait of educated middle-class Jamaicans fromindependence to the present. . . . Few if any works of Caribbean literature have described sothoroughly and so movingly the tragedies, great and small, of aging.” – Nicholas Laughlin,Editor, Caribbean Review of Books
Barbara Lalla is Professor of Language and Literature, Department of Liberal Arts,University of the West Indies, Trinidad and Tobago. Her publications include Postcolonialisms:
Caribbean Re-reading of Medieval English Discourse; Defining Jamaican Fiction: Marronage and
the Discourse of Survival; Language in Exile: Three Hundred Years of Jamaican Creole and Voices
in Exile: Jamaican Texts of the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries (companion volumes bothco-authored/co-edited with Jean D’Costa); and articles on Caribbean literature, discourse andlanguage history. Texts on writing at the tertiary level include English for Academic Purposes
and Writing about Literature, co-authored with Paul Morgan. She has also co-edited twovolumes with Jennifer Rahim, Beyond Borders: Cross-Culturalism and the Caribbean Canon andCreated in the West Indies: Caribbean Perspectives on V.S. Naipaul. Her first novel, a Jamaicanfamily saga, Arch of Fire, appeared in 1998 and has since been translated into German.
General Interest/Caribbean CulturalStudiesISBN 978-976-640-248-8224pp 6 x 9US$25 PaperJanuary 2011US and Caribbean rights
O F R E L A T E D I N T E R E S T
Reinterpreting theHaitian Revolutionand Its CulturalAftermaths
Martin Munro,Elizabeth Walcott-Hackshaw (eds.)978-976-640-190-0US$32 (s) Paper
Modernity Disavowed:Haiti and the Culturesof Slavery in the Ageof Revolution
Sibylle Fischer978-976-640-151-1US$27 (s) Paper
Echoes of the HaitianRevolution,1804–2004
Martin Munro,Elizabeth Walcott-Hackshaw (eds.)978-976-640-212-9US$32 (s) Paper
Haiti RisingHaitian History, Culture and the Earthquake of 2010
Edited by Martin Munro
The earthquake that struck Haiti on 12 January 2010 thrust the nation into the publicconsciousness as never before. There is now an unprecedented empathy for and interest inHaiti, and a related need for information on Haitian reality, beyond the clichés often associatedwith the nation. In particular, there is a special interest in the earthquake and the questionsof Haiti’s future development.
Haiti Rising responds to this public interest and has three fundamental aims: to raise awarenessof Haiti, its people, culture and history; to allow some who were in Haiti during the earthquakea chance to testify; and to raise funds for artists living and working in Haiti.
The book brings together more than twenty essays written by some of the most prominentauthorities on Haiti, and offers insights on the political, social and historical contexts, as wellas the uniquely rich culture of the nation. The first part features survivor testimonies – movingaccounts of the earthquake and its aftermath written by authors and academics, Haitiannationals and foreign visitors. The second part presents essays on economics, politics, societyand culture (music, religion, visual art), and the ways in which they are interrelated in historyand in contemporary life. The third section focuses on the history of Haiti from colonial timesto the present and shows the ways in which history has shaped Haitian society. It shows howcolonial class and colour structures have persisted, how the revolution has shaped subsequentpolitical, cultural and social structures, and how the legacy of the Duvalier dictatorship haslingered. The final section features contributors who were not in Haiti at the time of theearthquake, but who have strong ties to Haiti. These authors write about their personalconnections to Haiti, their reactions to the earthquake, and their hopes and recommendationsfor reconstruction.
All author royalties from this book will be donated to the Haitian Art Relief Fund, a charityworking to support the many visual artists in Haiti who have suffered from the earthquake.The book stands as a written document of this cataclysmic event and as a monument to thosewho were in Haiti at the time of the earthquake. It is vital reading for anyone who wants tofind out about Haiti, its remarkable history and culture, and its prospects for the future.
“. . . essential reading for scholars, students and general readers interested in Haiti. It will alsobe of use for those involved in consciousness raising around Haiti over the coming few years.This is an urgently required volume that I will recommend widely for its varied yet coherentlyfocused content.” – Charles Forsdick, James Barrow Chair of French and Head of School SOCLAS
(French), University of Liverpool
Contributors: Gage Averill, LeGrace Benson, Jean Casimir, Maryse Condé, Louis-PhilippeDalembert, Laurent Dubois, J. Michael Dash, Yanick Lahens, Michael Largey, Michel LeBris, Elizabeth McAlister, Madison Smartt Bell, Matthew J. Smith, Evelyne Trouillot
Martin Munro is Professor, Department of Modern Languages and Linguistics, FloridaState University. He is the author of Shaping and Reshaping the Caribbean: The Work of Aimé
Césaire and René Depestre and Exile and Post-1946 Haitian Literature: Alexis, Depestre, Ollivier,
Laferrière, Danticat, and co-editor (with Elizabeth Walcott-Hackshaw) of Reinterpreting the
Haitian Revolution and Its Cultural Aftershocks and Echoes of the Haitian Revolution.
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Jamaican TheatreHighlights of the Performing Arts in the Twentieth Century
Wycliffe Bennett and Hazel Bennett
The late Wycliffe Bennett (1922–2009), widely regarded as the godfather of the Jamaicantheatre in the second half of the twentieth century, brings all his experience and insight to thislast, formidable production. Wycliffe Bennett saw almost every theatrical production of notein this period, directed some productions himself, and, in addition, worked as a manager andtrainer in speech, radio and television. His wife, Hazel, co-author of this liberally illustratedwork, adds her skills as documentalist and witness. Together, the Bennetts have produced thefirst book of its kind, a panorama of performance, from the imported touring companies andfledgling local elitist groups of the 1920s and 1930s, to the birth of the Little Theatre Movementduring the war years; from the small, ambitious groups of the 1950s and 1960s to the thrivingcommercial “roots theatre” of the new century.
The book also chronicles the development of drama on radio and television, and Jamaica’s smallbut important film industry. In extensively documenting and analysing dance, it considersmodern foundation groups like Ivy Baxter and the National Dance Theatre Company, as wellas their precursors and myriad offspring. A pioneer of the Jamaica Festival movement, WycliffeBennett describes it from the inside, culminating with eyewitness accounts of the spectacularCaribbean Festival of the Arts, Carifesta ’76, over which he presided. As well, the authorstreat music in all its variety, from classical through the Frats Quintet to reggae.
There are also sections by experts in their fields: Yvonne Jones Brewster writes on Theatre 77
and Barn Theatre; Dr Maria Smith examines Revival; Barbara Requa discusses dancetechniques; and Mary Brathwaite Morgan considers the golden age of drama at the Universityof the West Indies.
To complete this panoptic view of the performing arts, there is an A to Z of the scores ofoutstanding personages in the different fields.
“This story of the Jamaican theatre comes with the authority of a particular brand ofknowledge rooted in practical experience not only in the shaping of what takes place betweenproscenium pillars, but also in sustained scholarly observation and analysis of the work doneover years by many throughout Jamaica. The authority is further bolstered by the authors’active engagement over time in the building and active management of institutionalframeworks which guarantee to Jamaican arts and culture the continuing exercise of thecreative imagination – individual and collective.” – From the foreword by late Rex Nettleford,
OM, co-founder and artistic director of the NDTC.
Wycliffe Bennett was Chairman Emeritus of the Ward Theatre Foundation and lifemember of the Little Theatre Movement. He also served as General Manager of the JamaicaBroadcasting Corporation and Chairman of the Creative Production and Training Centre, theJamaica School of Drama and the Jamaica School of Music, and was a Fellow of the WoodrowWilson International Center for Scholars.
Hazel Bennett is a former Head of the Department of Library Science, University of theWest Indies, Jamaica, and co-author, with Sir Philip Sherlock, of The Story of the Jamaican
People. She has been active behind the scenes in myriad theatrical productions in Jamaica andserved on a number of National Festival committees.
General Interest/Caribbean HistoryISBN 978-976-640-226-6440pp 9 x 11US$60 PaperFebruary 2011
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Biography/Caribbean HistoryISBN 978-976-640-249-5288pp 6 x 9US$30 PaperOctober 2010Caribbean rights
O F R E L A T E D I N T E R E S T
ArchibaldMonteath:Igbo, Jamaican,Moravian Maureen Warner-Lewis
978-976-640-197-9US$42 (s) Paper
Between Slavery and Freedom
Roderick A.McDonald (ed.)
978-976-640-090-3US$32 (s) Paper
Caribbean rights
Contrary Voices
Representations of WestIndian SlaveryKarina Williamson(ed.)
978-976-640-208-2US$32 (s) Paper
The Struggles of John BrownRusswurmThe Life and Writings of a Pan-Africanist Pioneer, 1799–1851
Winston James
“If I know my own heart, I can truly say, that I have not a selfish wish in placing myself underthe patronage of the [American Colonization] Society; usefulness in my day & generation, iswhat I principally court.” – John Brown Russwurm, 1829
John Brown Russwurm (1799–1851) is almost completely missing from the annals of the pan-African movement, despite the pioneering role he played as an educator, abolitionist, editor,government official, emigrationist and colonizationist. Russwurm’s life is one of “firsts”: firstAfrican-American graduate of Maine’s Bowdoin College, co-founder of Freedom’s Journal,America’s first newspaper to be owned, operated and edited by African Americans, and,following his emigration to Africa, first black governor of the Maryland section of Liberia.Despite his accomplishments, Russwurm struggled internally with the perennial pan-Africanistdilemma of whether to go to Africa or stay and fight in the United States, and his ordeal wasthe first of its kind to be experienced and resolved before the public eye.
With this slim, accessible biography of Russwurm, Winston James makes a major contributionto the history of black uplift and protest in the early American republic and the larger pan-African world. James supplements the biography with a carefully edited and annotatedselection of Russwurm’s writings, which vividly demonstrate the trajectory of his politicalthinking and contribution to pan-Africanist thought and highlight the challenges confrontingthe peoples of the African diaspora. Though enormously rich and powerfully analytical,Russwurm’s writings have never been previously anthologized.
John Brown Russwurm is a unique and unparalleled reflection on the early American republic,the African diaspora and the wider history of the times. An unblinking observer of andcommentator on the condition of African Americans as well as a courageous fighter againstwhite supremacy and for black emancipation, Russwurm’s life and writings provide a distinctand articulate voice on race that is as relevant to the present as it was to his own lifetime.
Winston James is Professor of History, University of California, Irvine. He is the authorof A Fierce Hatred of Injustice: Claude McKay’s Jamaica and His Poetry of Rebellion; Holding Aloft
the Banner of Ethiopia: Caribbean Radicalism in Early Twentieth- Century America, which wonthe Gordon K. Lewis Memorial Award for Caribbean Scholarship from the Caribbean StudiesAssociation; and the co-editor of Inside Babylon: The Caribbean Diaspora in Britain.
John Brown Russwurm
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Biography/Caribbean HistoryISBN 978-976-640-250-1384pp 7 x 10US$30 (s) PaperFebruary 2011
O F R E L A T E D I N T E R E S T
Enjoying Power:
Eugenia Charles andPolitical Leadership inthe CommonwealthCaribbeanEudine Barriteau,Alan Cobley (eds.)
978-976-640-191-7US$32 (s) Paper
Eric Williams:
The Myth and the ManSelwyn Ryan
978-976-640-207-5US$75 (s) Cloth
Stronger, Surer, Bolder:
Ruth Nita Barrow - SocialChange and InternationalDevelopmentEudine Barriteau, AlanCobley (eds.)
978-976-640-101-6US$27 (s) Paper
Edward Seaga and the Challenges of Modern JamaicaPatrick E. Bryan
This is the first scholarly biography of Edward Philip George Seaga, retired prime ministerof Jamaica (1980–1989) and former leader of the Jamaica Labour Party (1974–2005). PatrickBryan examines Seaga in light of the twentieth-century history of Jamaica, which experiencedthe challenges of race, colour, economic dependence, the transition from the British colonialperiod to independence in 1962, and the challenges of creating a Jamaican national state andseparate cultural identity. Although the study focuses on Edward Seaga, the historical forcesthat shaped Jamaica’s history are central, in particular the way in which he confronted theseforces. In placing Seaga in historical perspective, this work strikes a seasoned and balancedanalysis of the man and is neither an apologia nor iconoclastic. Based on a variety of primarysources, government records, interviews and secondary sources, the author paints a compellingportrait of a complex man, a contradictory mixture of idealism and pragmatism, but, aboveall, a Jamaican nationalist who had a profound impact on Jamaican politics, tourism, cultureand finance.
“For teachers, police, nurses, doctors, lawyers, accountants, surveyors, professionals, the readingand study of this book is mandatory. For the judiciary, and all parliamentarians and thediplomatic corps, the reading and study of this book is compulsory. For all non-Jamaicans,working short- or long-term in Jamaica, the reading and study of this book is essential.”– Gerald McLaughlin, Sunday Observer, 21 March 2010
Patrick E. Bryan is Douglas Hall Professor of History, University of the West Indies,Jamaica. His publications include The Haitian Revolution and Its Effects; Philanthropy and
Social Welfare in Jamaica; The Jamaican People, 1880–1902; Jamaica: The Aviation Story; The
Legacy of a Goldsmith: A History of Wolmer’s Schools; Inside Out and Outside In: Factors in the
Creation of Contemporary Jamaica. He is also the co-editor (with Rupert Lewis) of Marcus
Garvey: His Work and Impact and (with Karl Watson) of Not for Wages: Eyewitness Summaries
of the 1938 Labour Rebellion in Jamaica.
New in
Paper
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Biography/CaribbeanCultural StudiesISBN 978-976-640-242-6 ClothISBN 978-976-640-243-3 Paper224pp 6 x 9US$50 Cloth US$25 Paper November 2010
O F R E L A T E D I N T E R E S T
Reclaiming AfricanReligions in Trinidad
The Socio-PoliticalLegitimation of theOrisha and SpiritualBaptist FaithsFrances Henry
978-976-640-129-0US$32 (s) Paper
Archibald MonteathIgbo, Jamaican,Moravian Maureen Warner-Lewis
978-976-640-197-9US$42 (s) Paper
Christianity in theCaribbean
Essays on ChurchHistoryArmando Lampe(ed.)
978-976-640-029-3US$22 (s) Paper
Ye Shall DreamPatriarch Granville Williams and the Barbados SpiritualBaptists
Ezra E.H. Griffith
“This book is a detailed study of the Spiritual Baptist tradition in Barbados and its developmentunder the leadership of Patriarch Granville Williams. Using a multidisciplinary approachdrawing on historical, anthropological and sociological perspectives and an ethnographicresearch methodology, the author has crafted a detailed account of the emergence of thetraditions from its Trinidadian roots to its specifically Barbadian context.” – Carol B. Duncan,
Associate Professor and Chair, Department of Religion and Culture, Wilfrid Laurier University,
Canada
The Spiritual Baptist Church, thought to be present in the English-speaking Caribbean fromabout the late nineteenth century, has long been a fairly potent force in the daily life of theislanders, although its effect has varied depending on the island concerned. Certainly, inTrinidad and St Vincent, the movement has had considerable visibility over the years; and inthose countries, its evolution and development have seen the movement take a prestigiousplace as a respected religious institute in the last two or three decades. However, the movementonly extended to Barbados in 1957 when a Spiritual Baptist preacher, a Barbadian by birth,returned to his native island from Trinidad, where he had been living for several years. TheReverend Granville Williams established the first Spiritual Baptist Church in Barbados andhas continued to oversee the church’s development since its inception.
The Barbados Spiritual Baptist Church is an important example of a new religious movementthat was introduced into the island fifty years ago and has undergone transformation from adisparaged religious cult into a settled and accepted denomination. Appearing at a time whenthe island was a British colony, the founder appealed to the masses, who were suffering frommaterial deprivation, economic hardship and a pervasive sense of hopelessness about theirfuture. He set out new possibilities for the black underclass and evoked the idea that Jesus wasblack and that blacks had a rightful place in the kingdom of Heaven.
Ye Shall Dream is an insightful, richly illustrated biography of both the church and its founder,in the context of a Caribbean island country coming to terms with its post-colonial identity.
Ezra E.H. Griffith is Deputy Chairman for Clinical Affairs, Department of Psychiatry, andProfessor, Department of Psychiatry and Department of African-American Studies, YaleUniversity. He has broad consultation experience in mental health service systems and haspublished extensively in the areas of cultural and forensic psychiatry. A former president ofthe Connecticut Psychiatric Society, Dr Griffith chairs that society’s Ethics Committee, as wellas the Ethics Committee of the Connecticut Mental Health Center. He has had a sustainedinterest in psychiatry and religion for many years. He has been a student of the BarbadosSpiritual Baptist Church for over two decades and has published several papers on that faithgroup and other religious matters.
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O F R E L A T E D I N T E R E S T
Writing Rage
Unmasking Violencethrough CaribbeanDiscoursePaula Morgan, Valerie Youssef
978-976-640-189-4US$32 (s) Paper
Diasporic(Dis)locations
Indo-CaribbeanWomen WritersNegotiate the KalaPaniBrinda J. Mehta
978-976-640-157-3US$32 (s) Paper
Maharani’s Misery
Narratives of a Passagefrom India to theCaribbeanVerene A. Shepherd
978-976-640-121-4US$22 (s) Paper
BindiThe Multifaceted Lives of Indo-Caribbean Women
Edited by Rosanne Kanhai
In contemporary times, the bindi (red dot between the eyebrows) is decorative as well asreligious, and is worn by women of any marital status, Hindu or non-Hindu, in India, itsdiaspora and globally. Rosanne Kanhai uses the “bindi” to characterize how Indo-Caribbeanwomen come into their own in multiple ways. The book is a sequel to Matikor: The Politics of
Identity for Indo-Caribbean Women and showcases recent works that reflect a variety ofdisciplines, styles and topics that include considering Indo-Caribbean women in creative,artistic and performance text, historical and anthropological analyses, intersection with their“others” in the Caribbean and its diaspora, narratives of self, healing and spiritual growthand roles in religion and cultural activities.
Bindi “makes a significant contribution to the field. It has moved forward the debates startedby the first generation scholarship on Indo-Caribbean women and gender . . . The essays offera more dynamic set of debates that allow tradition to dialogue with contemporary in onebreath, as real life does.” – Patricia Mohammed, Professor, Gender and Cultural Studies and
Campus Coordinator, School for Graduate Studies and Research, University of the West Indies,
Trinidad and Tobago
Contributors: Anita Baksh, Brenda Gopeesingh, Gabrielle Jamela Hosein, Shaheeda Hosein,Rosanne Kanhai, Halima-Sa’adia Kassim, Kumar Mahabir, Paula Morgan, Sherry Ann Singh,Valerie Youssef
Rosanne Kanhai is Professor of English and Women Studies Director, WesternWashington University. She is the author of three books: The Green Face Man: Poetry and
Short Fiction; Rage and Renewal: Poetry and Short Fiction; and Matikor: The Politics of Identity
for Indo-Caribbean Women and several refereed articles.
Caribbean CulturalStudies/Gender StudiesISBN 978-976-640-238-9256pp 6 x 9US$40 (s) PaperFebruary 2011
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O F R E L A T E D I N T E R E S T
Identity andSecession in theCaribbean
Tobago versus Trinidad,1889–1980Learie Luke
978-976-640-199-3US$32 (s) Paper
Indo-CaribbeanIndenture
Resistance andAccommodation,1838–1920Lomarsh Roopnarine
978-976-640-185-6US$27 (s) Paper
Tobago in Wartime,1793–1815
K.O. Laurence
978-976-640-003-3US$18 (s) Paper
British-Controlled Trinidad andVenezuelaA History of Economic Interests and Subversions, 1830–1962
Kelvin Singh
This unique work assesses the diplomatic, commercial and political consequences of theconflicting interests of the British imperial government and colonial Trinidad on Venezuela.Imperial interests predominated and the British turned a blind eye to the use of Trinidad byopponents of Venezuelan regimes as a base for the overthrow of Venezuelan governments. Theisland colony played an important role in the politics of destabilization in Venezuela.
The scholarship is based on a variety of primary sources, particularly the British ForeignOffice and the Colonial Office as well as Venezuelan and US archives.
“This work casts more important light on the functioning of British imperialism, in its struggleagainst US hegemony, with respect to international oil policy, when significant deposits ofpetroleum were located in Venezuela. It also explains sympathetically the issues of foreignpolicy for a young nation such as Venezuela, and its remarkable ability to confront imperialpowers and to play one off against the other.” – Patrick E. Bryan, Douglas Hall Professor of
History, University of the West Indies, Jamaica
Kelvin Singh lectured on the history of the Caribbean, Latin American and US relations withLatin America and the Caribbean and served as Head, Department of History, University ofthe West Indies, Trinidad and Tobago. He is the author of several essays on Trinidad, theCaribbean and global history in scholarly journals. He is the author of Race and Class Struggles
in a Colonial State: Trinidad, 1917–1945 and Bloodstained Tombs: The Muharram Massacre, 1884.Caribbean HistoryISBN 978-976-640-237-2316pp 6 x 9US$44 (s) PaperOctober 2010
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Caribbean HistoryISBN 978-976-640-236-5354pp 7 x 10US$30 (s) PaperAugust 2010
O F R E L A T E D I N T E R E S T
Lady Nugent’sJournal of HerResidence in Jamaicafrom 1801 to 1805
A New and RevisedEditionPhilip Wright (ed.)
978-976-640-128-3US$32 (s) Paper
Port Royal, Jamaica
Michael Pawson,David Buisseret
978-976-640-072-9US$27 (s) Paper
In Miserable Slavery
Thomas Thistlewood inJamaica, 1750-86Douglas Hall
978-976-640-066-8US$22 (s) Paper
Jamaica in 1687The Taylor Manuscript at the National Library of Jamaica
David Buisseret
This remarkable description of Jamaica in the 1680s was written by a contemporary Englishobserver, John Taylor, who spent some months on the island. The 800-page manuscript isheld by the National Library of Jamaica, and has rarely been used by scholars. It containsinformation about Jamaica under the Spaniards, about the English invasion of 1655, and aboutthe formation of the subsequent society, including the treatment of slaves. There are sectionson the island’s settlement and architecture, including a particularly full description of PortRoyal. John Taylor sets out fifty current laws, many of them unknown. He also carefullyexplains the nature of Jamaica’s birds, beasts and plants.
He offers an image of the island before the general spread of sugar cultivation, citing somecreatures now extinct in Jamaica; he also makes many suggestions about the medical use ofnatural products. His world is still one in which certain places are enchanted, though he alsodescribes an island whose main features will be entirely familiar to modern Jamaicans.Buisseret’s edition provides an annotation both for the meaning of particular words and forthe significance of the discourse. A glossary provides further meanings and notes have beenwritten to appeal to the general reader. The text will be useful to generations of scholars andstudents or to anyone with an interest in Jamaica and its colourful history.
“Primary sources on English Jamaica in the seventeenth century are extremely rare, especiallyones reproduced in print. The University of the West Indies Press has performed a significantservice in making public one of the most important sources for early Jamaican history – JohnTaylor’s manuscript describing his travels to and residency in Jamaica from 1686 to 1688. . . .Taylor wrote for his fellow Englishmen back home, and his interests ranged widely fromtravel information to politics, geography, agriculture, labor, health, piracy, and history. ForTaylor, Jamaica constituted an exotic world, and his manuscript contained topics that he hopedwould amaze as well as inform. . . . Readers will find this edited work to be handsomelyprinted and full of subjects that constitute the heart of later island history. Highlyrecommended.”
– A. Lewis, Western Carolina University, Choice: Current Reviews for Academic Libraries, March
2009
Co-published in association with the National Library of Jamaica and the Mill Press, Limited.
David Buisseret is former Professor of the History of Cartography, University of Texas,Arlington and former Director of the Center for Cartography, University of Chicago, andchief editor of the Oxford Companion to World Exploration. His books include From Sea Charts
to Satellite Images: Interpreting North American History Through Maps and, with MichaelPawson, Port Royal, Jamaica. He has taught at a variety of institutions, including the Universityof the West Indies, Jamaica, served as editor of the Jamaican Historical Review and is a fellowof the Royal Historical Society.
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Jamaica in Slaveryand Freedom
History, Heritage andCultureKathleen Monteith,Glen Richards (eds.)
978-976-640-108-5US$42 (s) Paper
Neither Led norDriven:
Contesting BritishCultural Imperialism inJamaica, 1865–1920Brian L. Moore,Michele A. Johnson
978-976-640-155-9Cloth978-976-640-154-2PaperUS$70 (s) ClothUS$37 (s) Paper
No Bond but the Law
Punishment, Race, andGender in Jamaican StateFormation, 1780–1870Diana Paton
978-976-640-161-0US$27 (s) Paper
They Do As They PleaseThe Jamaican Struggle for Cultural Freedom after Morant Bay
Brian L. Moore and Michele A. Johnson
This book is a companion to Neither Led nor Driven, published in 2004. It examines the secularaspects of culture in Jamaica, namely, material culture (architecture and home furnishings,dress, and food), rites of passage, language and oral culture, creative and performance arts,popular entertainment, sports and games, social clubs and fraternities, and the issues ofdrinking and gambling. It also examines the lifestyle cultures of Indian and Chineseimmigrants who were new arrivals in Jamaica.
The book argues that although a vibrant and fully functional creole culture existed in Jamaica,after Morant Bay, diverse elements within the upper and middle classes (the cultural elites)formed a coalition to eradicate that “barbaric” culture which they believed had contributed tothe uprising, and to replace it with “superior” cultural items imported from Victorian Britainin order to “civilize” and anglicize the people. It reinforces the prime thesis of Neither Led nor
Driven that the lower classes, the main targets of this campaign, drew on their own Afro-Creole cultural heritage to resist and ignore the new elite cultural agenda; but they didselectively embrace some aspects of the imported Victorian culture which they creolized to fittheir own cultural matrix. Ultimately, the cultural elite efforts at “reform” were hampered bytheir own ambivalence, hypocrisy and disunity, and they actually impeded the sponsoredprocess of anglicization. This book advances our understanding of the concept and process ofcreolization. It extends the pioneering work of Kamau Brathwaite and reassesses the theoriesof other scholars, particularly Richard Burton and Nigel Bolland.
The data are primary archival and contemporary library resources housed mainly in Jamaicaand the United Kingdom. The authors’ meticulous analysis of official reports, newspapers,religious denomination reports, private papers and published accounts has produced a workthat illuminates the complex and still under-explored period of Jamaica’s history as the societyentered new phases of “modernity”.
“A marvellous example of social history at its best.” – Franklin W. Knight, Leonard and Helen
R. Stulman Professor of History, Johns Hopkins University
Brian L. Moore is John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Professor of History and Africanaand Latin American Studies, Colgate University, and he has taught at universities in Jamaicaand Guyana. He is the award-winning author or editor of more than eight scholarly books,several chapters in edited books, and articles in the Journal of Caribbean History, Comparative
Studies in Society and History, Boletin de Estudios Lationamerican y del Caribe, Bulletin of Eastern
Caribbean Affairs, Immigrants and Minorities, Guyana Historical Journal, and Jamaica Historical
Review. In addition to his distinguished teaching and publishing career, he has served in theMinistry of Foreign Affairs, Guyana, and was a diplomatic representative to the UnitedNations General Assembly and Great Britain.
Michele A. Johnson is Associate Professor, Department of History, York University,Canada, and she has taught at the University of the West Indies, Jamaica. She is the award-winning author or editor of several scholarly books and has published extensively in scholarlyjournals. She received the Dean’s Award for Teaching, Faculty of Arts, York University, in2004–2005.
Caribbean HistoryISBN 978-976-640-244-0 Cloth
ISBN 978-976-640-245-7 Paper
620pp 6 x 9
US$65 (s) Cloth
US$45 (s) Paper
February 2011
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Caribbean HistoryISBN 978-976-640-240-2248pp 6 x 9US$35 (s) PaperOctober 2010
O F R E L A T E D I N T E R E S T
Plantation Jamaica,1750–1850
Capital and Control in aColonial EconomyB.W. Higman
978-976-640-165-8US$70 (s) Cloth
Depression toDecolonization
Barclays Bank (DCO) inthe West Indies,1926–1962Kathleen E.A.Monteith
978-976-640-198-6US$32 (s) Paper
Sugar and Slavery
An Economic History ofthe British West Indies,1623–1775Richard B. Sheridan
978-976-8125-13-2US$30 (s) Paper
West Indian Business HistoryEnterprise and Entrepreneurship
Edited by B.W. Higman and Kathleen E.A. Monteith
The study of business history as a distinct discipline is well established in many places butrelatively neglected in the anglophone Caribbean. West Indian Business History: Essays in
Enterprise and Entrepreneurship locates the regional history of business within the scope ofCaribbean/Atlantic world economic history, placing it within the broader context of businesshistory. As well as providing the foundation text for courses in West Indian business history,this volume is valuable to students of other areas of Caribbean history, wherever they may beenrolled, and also to Caribbean business studies students.
The essays included in this collection bring together a selection of work in West Indian businesshistory, some of them first published several decades ago. The essays are intended to providean introduction to the state of the field and illustrate the ways in which business historyconnects with other themes in Caribbean history. They offer examples of the varieties of waysin which business history can be researched and written, and of the range of subjects that canbe studied.
Contributors: Henderson Carter, Aviston Downes, Douglas Hall, Jerome S. Handler, B.W.Higman, Jacqueline Levy, Kathleen Phillips Lewis, Richard A. Lobdell, Kathleen E.A.Monteith, Richard B. Sheridan, Nuala Zahedieh
B.W. Higman is William Keith Hancock Professor of History in the School of History,Research School of Social Sciences, Australian National University, and Professor Emeritus,the University of the West Indies, Jamaica. His award-winning publications include Slave
Population and Economy in Jamaica, 1807–1834; Jamaica Surveyed: Plantation Maps and Plans of
the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries; Montpelier, Jamaica: A Plantation Community in Slavery
and Freedom; Plantation Jamaica, 1750–1850: Capital and Control in a Colonial Economy, and
Jamaican Food: History, Biology, Culture. His most recent book is Jamaican Place Names, withB.J. Hudson.
Kathleen E.A. Monteith is Senior Lecturer and Head, Department of History andArchaeology, University of the West Indies, Jamaica. Her publications include Jamaica in
Slavery and Freedom: History, Heritage and Culture, edited with Glen Richards, and Depression
to Decolonization: Barclays Bank (DCO) in the West Indies, 1926–1962, both recipients of BestPublication (Book), University of the West Indies, Mona, Principal’s Award (2002 and 2008).Her latest publication is The Caribbean, the Atlantic World and Global Transformation: Lectures
in Caribbean Advance Proficiency Examinations in History, edited with Jenny Jemmott andAleric Josephs.
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Essays on the Theory of Plantation Economy
An Institutional andHistorical Approach toCaribbean EconomicDevelopmentLloyd Best, Kari Levitt
978-976-640-211-2US$37 (s) Paper
Don’t Burn Our Bridges
The Case for OwningAirlinesJean S. Holder
2010978-976-640-232-7US$37 (s) Paper
Surviving Small Size
Regional Integration in Caribbean MinistatesPatsy Lewis
978-976-640-116-0US$37 (s) Paper
Export/Import Trends and EconomicDevelopment in Trinidad, 1919–1939
Doddridge H.N. Alleyne
With an introduction by Bridget Brereton
Co-published with the Sir Arthur Lewis Institute of Social and Economic Studies,St Augustine Campus
This book was originally researched and written as an Oxford thesis submitted in 1958, yet itremains a valuable and pertinent study, by no means outdated by the passage of time. The factis that the economic history of Trinidad and Tobago has been seriously under-researched, ascompared with its political, social and cultural history. We still lack a scholarly account of theevolution of the country’s economy, both overall and for specific periods. What Alleyne haswritten is a detailed, empirically rich study of the economic (and social) history of the colonyin the crucial twenty years between the two World Wars (1919–1939), the period when thefoundations for the modern, post-war economy were laid. The study is based on the meticulousresearch into a wide range of primary sources, especially official reports and papers, andstatistical materials such as the colonial censuses and fiscal records. No other work providesus with this kind of basis for understanding the modern economy of Trinidad and Tobago.
“The central thesis of the book is that oil industry came to maturity in the 1920s and especiallythe 1930s, and supplanted export agriculture as the colony’s chief source of export income, afateful shift for the country’s future.” – From the introduction by Bridget Brereton, Professor of
History, University of the West Indies, Trinidad and Tobago.
Co-published with the Sir Arthur Lewis Insititute, University of the West Indies, Trinidad andTobago.
Doddridge H.N. Alleyne has a distinguished record of more than forty years of publicservice with the Government of Trinidad and Tobago. He was Permanent Secretary, Ministryof Petroleum and Mines, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Finance, Planning andDevelopment, and Permanent Secretary to the Prime Minister. He also served as the Trinidadand Tobago Ambassador and Permanent Representative to the United Nations.
Economics/Caribbean History ISBN 978-976-8125-91-0376pp 6 x 9US$45 (s) PaperSeptember 2010
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Economics/Caribbean HistoryISBN 978-976-640-239-6172pp 6 x 9US$25 (s) PaperSeptember 2010
O F R E L A T E D I N T E R E S T
Public SectorEconomics forDeveloping Countries
Second EditionMichael Howard,Althea La Foucadeand Ewan Scott (eds.)
978-976-640-224-2US$47 (s) Paper
The EconomicDevelopment ofBarbados
Michael Howard
978-976-640-188-7US$27 (s) Paper
The Economics ofDevelopment inSmall Countries
with Special Referenceto the CaribbeanWilliam G. Demas
978-976-640-223-5US$22 (s) Paper
A History of Money and Banking in Barbados, 1627–1973
Eric Armstrong
With a foreword by Sir Keith Hunte
A History of Money and Banking in Barbados documents the development of money andcommercial banking in Barbados from the date of the settlement in 1627 to the establishmentof the Central Bank of Barbados in 1973. It examines the early years of barter; the introductionof British coins by the Royal Proclamations of 1825 and 1838; the issue of colonial coins (anchormoney); the introduction and circulation of foreign coins; the debate over the legal tender ofBritish silver coins and the share of the seigniorage of these coins.
Armstrong examines the first banks, the Colonial Bank and the West India Bank, in thenineteenth century, the introduction of Canadian banks in the twentieth century, the expansionof Barclays Bank as well as the issue of Barbados government currency notes; the measurestaken by the British government and the Caribbean governments during the Second WorldWar to ensure an adequate supply of currency; and the agreement between Barbados, Trinidadand British Guiana (Guyana) to make their government currency legal tender in each country.
Armstrong analyses the establishment and operation of the British Caribbean Currency Boardand its acrimonious demise, the establishment of the East Caribbean Currency Authority, thewithdrawal of Barbados from the Authority, and the establishment of the Central Bank ofBarbados.
Eric Armstrong is an economist who has had a distinguished career as a practitioner and asa teacher. He received his Bachelor of Arts (Economics and Statistics) from ColumbiaUniversity and served on or with the Regional Labour Board, the Regional EconomicCommittee, the Government of the Federation of the West Indies, the Government of Jamaicaand the Caribbean Development Bank. He has also lectured at the University of the WestIndies, Barbados.
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Essays on the Theoryof the PlantationEconomy
An Institutional andHistorical Approach toCaribbean EconomicDevelopmentLloyd Best, Kari Levitt
978-976-640-211-2US$37 (s) Paper
Theoretical andEmpirical Exercises inEconometrics
Nlandu Mamingi
978-976-640-176-4US$55 (s) Cloth
The GeorgeBeckford Papers
George Beckford;Kari Levitt (ed.)
978-976-8125-75-0Cloth978-976-8125-40-8PaperUS$45 (s) ClothUS$30 (s) Paper
A Practical Introduction toEconometric MethodsClassical and Modern
Patrick K. Watson and Sonja S. Teelucksingh
The text is aimed at final-year undergraduate students or those at the graduate level doingeconometrics for the first time. It is an introductory course in the theory and practice of classicaland modern econometric methods. A proper study of the material will allow the reader to
• Understand the scope and limitations of classical and modern econometric techniques
• Read, write and properly interpret articles and reports of an applied econometric nature
• Build upon the elements of econometric theory and practice introduced in the book
Although some basic knowledge of matrix algebra and elementary statistical theory will beassumed, much of it is covered in the body of the text. All the main theoretical concepts areillustrated with the use of econometric software, mainly EViews.
Patrick K. Watson is Director of Sir Arthur Lewis Institute for Social and EconomicStudies and former Dean, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of the West Indies, Trinidadand Tobago. He is also the former Director of the Central Bank of Trinidad and Tobago.
Sonja S. Teelucksingh is Marie Curie Research Fellow, Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei,Italy. She was previously Lecturer, Department of Economics, University of the West Indies,Trinidad and Tobago.Economics
ISBN 978-976-640-247-1310pp 7 x 10US$40 (s) PaperNovember 2010
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Medical StudiesISBN 978-976-640-235-8240pp 6 x 9 US$20 (s) PaperAugust 2010
O F R E L A T E D I N T E R E S T
The Caribbean AIDSEpidemic
Glenford Howe, AlanCobley (eds.)
978-976-640-088-0US$32 Paper
Jamaican FolkMedicine
A Source of HealingArvilla Payne-Jackson, Mervyn C.Alleyne
978-976-640-123-8US$32 (s) Paper
Ethical Practice inEveryday Health Care
E.R. Walrond
978-976-640-164-1US$27 (s) Paper
On the Treatment and Managementof the More Common West-IndiaDiseases, 1750–1802Edited and annotated by J. Edward Hutson
With a foreword by Henry Fraser
This work brings together, in one volume, a number of monographs from the mid to lateeighteenth century (the period known as the Age of Reason) on the diagnosis and treatmentof diseases of African and Creole slaves in the English-speaking Caribbean. Included hereare James Grainger’s Essay on the More Common West-Indian Diseases (1764) and book 4 ofThe Sugar-Cane (1764); book 2 of the Reverend Griffith Hughes’s Natural History of the Island
of Barbados (1750); and Benjamin Moseley’s Miscellaneous Medical Observations (1789).
These monographs have been all but forgotten; however, they are of importance to scholars.Dr Hutson provides a fully annotated text that explains archaic terminology, makes medical,botanical and Latin terminology accessible to non-specialists in those fields, and providesuseful explanations of eighteenth-century medical concepts. This fascinating collection hasmuch to offer historians and health-care professionals, as well as general readers with aninterest in the West Indies.
“This volume will provide a treasury of source material for the study of medical history in theCaribbean. It comes 250 years after Hughes, Hillary, Moseley and Grainger were firstpublished, yet so much of their writing resonates today. We must be grateful to Dr Hutson,who, like Dr Grainger before him, has taken ‘liberal pains in the Notes . . . to enlargeknowledge of the medicinal . . . plants of the West Indies’.” – Henry S. Fraser, University of the
West Indies, Barbados
J. Edward Hutson is a retired medical practitioner and member of the editorial board ofFamily Health Magazine, Edmonton, Canada. He has also written numerous articles formedical journals.
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Medical StudiesISBN 978-976-640-241-9350pp 7 x 10US$50 (s) PaperFebruary 2011
O F R E L A T E D I N T E R E S T
Current Themes inSocial Psychology
Derek Chadee, JasonYoung (eds.)
978-976-640-195-5US$37 (s) Paper
Health Communication in theCaribbean and BeyondEdited by Godfrey Steele
Health Communication in the Caribbean and Beyond provides a comprehensive, well-researchedand up-to-date discussion of the local and international health communication literature andprovides a theoretical and practical framework for teaching health and/or medicalcommunication skills. It reviews, explains and applies health communication concepts andprinciples and provides contexts for their application in both the classroom and in the healthprofessions.
In part 1, the contributors provide a context for health communication skills, education andtraining in the Caribbean. They cite experiences ranging from the development of an innovativecommunication skills programme, gender differences in delivering bad news, culturaldifferences between Western models of nonverbal communication and Caribbean contexts oflearning, and the efforts to develop clinical communication skills in an academic setting.
In part 2, the contributors address the theme of patient care and counselling from multipleperspectives, including exploring the psychological dimension of health communicationthrough patient care and interventions, developing an approach to psychosocial factors andcommunication skills that influence adherence, considering the challenges in adopting amulticultural perspective, and illuminating how interdisciplinary health teams provide medicaland dental support and communication to villagers. Collectively they cast new light on patient-provider communication and provide contrasting insights into issues of privacy and openness,tolerance and empathy.
In part 3, the contributors focus on mediated channels of health communication at bothinterpersonal and mass communication levels. They examine Internet communicationtechnologies to enhance health communication, the novel prospect of STD partner notificationthrough e-mail and the ethical challenges inherent in such approaches, and surveys to assess theimpact of mass communication in halting the spread of HIV/AIDS.
In part 4, the contributors analyse the effectiveness of campaigns and practices in healthcommunication. They explore how the role of religiosity in communicating on social andbehavioral change and strategies developed from decades of clinical practice and healthcommunication activities.
Contributors: Jerome De Lisle, Henry S. Fraser, Jacqueline Goulbourne, MichelleHarricharan, Joy L. Hart, Shaheed Mohammed, Kameel Mungrue, Nancy Muturi, SamMwangi, Paula Nunes, Ron Page, Maxine Ruddock-Small, Terence Seemungal, Sherry NaySimkins, Godfrey Steele, Surujpal Teelucksingh, Avinash Thombre, Kandi L. Walker, PeterWeller, Stella Williams, Sharon Williams-Brown, Valerie Youssef
Godfrey Steele is Senior Lecturer in Communication Studies, Department of Liberal Arts,University of the West Indies, Trinidad and Tobago. He coordinates the graduate programmein Human Communications Studies and was formerly Lecturer in Communication Skills forthe Medical Sciences.
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BOOKSin PRINT
Caribbean LanguageIssues Old and NewPapers in Honour ofProfessor Mervyn Alleyne on the Occasion of His Sixtieth BirthdayPauline Christie (ed.)1996ISBN 978-976-640-015-6242pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
Caribbean TheologyPreparing for the Challenges AheadHoward Gregory (ed.)1995ISBN 978-976-8125-09-5138pp 6 x 9US$18 (s) Paper
BindiThe Multifaceted Lives ofIndo-Caribbean WomenRosanne Kanhai (ed.)2011ISBN 978-976-640-238-9256pp 6 x 9US$40 (s) Paper
The African-CaribbeanWorldview and theMaking of CaribbeanSocietyHorace Levy (ed.)2009ISBN 978-976-640-210-5256pp 6 x 9US$37 (s) Paper
Beyond BordersCross-culturalism and the Caribbean CanonJennifer Rahim (ed.)with Barbara Lalla2009ISBN 978-976-640-216-7350pp 6 x 9US$37 (s) Paper
Caribbean Cultural Studies / 19
Caribbean History / 22
Caribbean Literature / 30
Economics / 32
Education / 34
Environmental Studies / 35
Gender Studies / 36
General Interest / 38
Legal Studies / 38
Medical Studies / 39
Political Science / 40
Psychology / 42
Sociology / 42Con
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Caribbean CultureSoundings on KamauBrathwaiteAnnie Paul (ed.)2006ISBN 978-976-640-150-4350pp 6 x 9US$37 (s) Paper
Caribbean CulturalStudies
Centring the PeripheryChaos, Order and theEthnohistory of DominicaPatrick L. Barker1994ISBN 978-976-640-000-2280pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
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Central Africa in theCaribbeanTranscending Time,Transforming CulturesMaureen Warner-Lewis2003ISBN 978-976-640-118-4428pp 6 x 9US$47 (s) Paper
The Construction andRepresentation of Raceand Ethnicity in theCaribbean and the WorldMervyn C. Alleyne2005 (2002)ISBN 978-976-640-179-5400pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
Dictionary of Caribbean English UsageRichard Allsopp (ed.)2003 (1996)ISBN 978-976-640-145-0776pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
Dread TalkThe Language of RastafariVelma Pollard2000ISBN 978-976-8125-68-2132pp 5 x 8US$20 (s) Paper Caribbean rights
Due RespectPapers on English andEnglish-Related Creoles inthe Caribbean in Honour ofProfessor Robert Le PagePauline Christie (ed.)2001ISBN 978-976-640-105-4272pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
Cricket Nurseries ofColonial BarbadosThe Elite Schools, 1865–1966Keith A.P. Sandiford1998ISBN 978-976-640-046-0194pp 6 x 9US$22 Paper
Culture @ the Cutting EdgeTracking Caribbean Popular MusicCurwen Best2004ISBN 978-976-640-124-5267pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
From Jamaican Creoleto Standard EnglishA Handbook for TeachersVelma Pollard2003 (1993)ISBN 978-976-640-148-180pp 8.5 x 11US$20 (s) Paper
Dictionary of Jamaican EnglishSecond EditionF.G. Cassidy, R.B. Le Page (eds.)2003 (1980)ISBN 978-976-640-127-6576pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
Creating Their Own SpaceThe Development of anIndian-Caribbean MusicalTraditionTina K. Ramnarine2001ISBN 978-976-640-099-6178pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
Exploring the Boundaries of Caribbean Creole Languages
Hazel Simmons-McDonald, Ian Robertson (eds.)2006978-976-640-186-3 Cloth978-976-640-187-0 Paper260pp 6 x 9 US$55 (s) ClothUS$32 (s) Paper
Echoes of the HaitianRevolution,1804-2004Martin Munro, ElizabethWalcott-Hackshaw (eds.)2009ISBN 978-976-640-212-9208pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
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Inna di Dancehall Popular Culture and thePolitics of Identity in JamaicaDonna P. Hope2006ISBN 978-976-640-168-9200pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
Golokwati: A TidalecticsHistory of Our ThymesVolume 1Kamau Brathwaite2010ISBN 978-976-640-213-6408pp 6 x 9US$42 (s) Paper
Golokwati: A TidalecticsHistory of Our ThymesVolume 2Kamau Brathwaite2010ISBN 978-976-640-214-3480pp 6 x 9US$42 (s) Paper
From Oral to LiterateCultureColonial Experience in the English West IndiesPeter A. Roberts1997ISBN 978-976-640-037-8312pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
Jamaica TalkThree Hundred Years of the English Language inJamaicaFrederic G. Cassidy2007ISBN 978-976-640-170-2470pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
Jamaican Folk MedicineA Source of HealingArvilla Payne-Jackson,Mervyn C. Alleyne2004ISBN 978-976-640-123-8238pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
Nationalism and IdentityCulture and the Imagination in a Caribbean DiasporaStefano Harney2006 (1996)ISBN 978-976-640-016-3224pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
Lionheart GalLife Stories of JamaicanWomenSistren with Honor Ford-Smith2005 (1986)ISBN 978-976-640-156-6270pp 5 x 8US$18 (s) Paper
New Register ofCaribbean English UsageRichard Allsopp (ed.)2010ISBN 978-976-640-228-096pp 6 x 9US$15 (s) Paper
PostcolonialismsCaribbean Rereading ofMedieval English DiscourseBarbara Lalla2008ISBN 978-976-640-201-3520pp 6 x 9US$37 (s) Paper
The Political CalypsoTrue Opposition in Trinidad and Tobago1962–1987Louis Regis1999ISBN 978-976-640-056-9290pp 6 x 9US$37 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
Rastafari Roots and IdeologyBarry Chevannes1995ISBN 978-976-640-013-2312pp 5.5 x 8.5US$22 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
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Reclaiming AfricanReligions in TrinidadThe Socio-PoliticalLegitimation of the Orishaand Spiritual Baptist FaithsFrances Henry2003ISBN 978-976-640-129-0253pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
Reinterpreting theHaitian Revolution andIts Cultural Aftershocks
Martin Munro, ElizabethWalcott-Hackshaw (eds.)2006ISBN 978-976-640-190-0200pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
Rex Nettleford and His WorksAn Annotated BibliographyAlbertina Jefferson (ed.)1999ISBN 978-976-640-053-8194pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
Rock It Come OverThe Folk Music of JamaicaOlive Lewin2000ISBN 978-976-640-028-6354pp 6 x 9US$27 Paper
Shared VisionsCelebrating the FiftiethAnniversary of the University of the West Indies1997ISBN 978-976-8125-46-088pp 8 x 11US$32 Paper
The Steelband MovementThe Forging of a National Art in Trinidad and TobagoStephen Stuempfle1995ISBN 978-976-640-026-2308pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
A Translation Manual for the Caribbean(English–Spanish)
Ian Stuart Craig, Jairo Sánchez 2007 ISBN 978-976-640-196-2200pp 7 x 10 US$32 (s) Paper
Trinidad YorubaFrom Mother Tongue toMemoryMaureen Warner-Lewis1997 (1996)ISBN 978-976-640-054-5296pp 6 x 9US$37 (s) Paper
Writing RageUnmasking Violencethrough CaribbeanDiscoursePaula Morgan,Valerie Youssef 2006ISBN 978-976-640-189-4278pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
Amerindians / Africans / AmericansThree Papers in Caribbean HistoryGerard LaFleur, SusanBranson, Grace Turner1996ISBN 978-976-8125-14-9190pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
CaribbeanHistory
Ye Shall DreamPatriarch Granville Williams andthe Barbados Spiritual BaptistsEzra E.H. Griffith2010ISBN 978-976-640-242-6 ClothISBN 978-976-640-243-3 Paper224pp 6 x 9US$50 ClothUS$25 Paper
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Archibald MonteathIgbo, Jamaican, MoravianMaureen Warner-Lewis2007ISBN 978-976-640-197-9400pp 7 x 10US$42 (s) Paper
Ascent to MonaA Short History of Jamaican Medical CareJohn S.R. Golding1994ISBN 978-976-8125-06-4118pp 6 x 9US$18 (s) Paper
Bechu‘Bound Coolie’ Radical in British Guiana 1894–1901Clem Seecharan1999ISBN 978-976-640-071-2326pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
Between Slavery andFreedom Special Magistrate John Anderson’s Journal of St Vincentduring the ApprenticeshipRoderick A. McDonald (ed.)2001ISBN 978-976-640-090-3332pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
Bricks and Stones from the PastJamaica’s Geological HeritageAnthony R.D. Porter2006ISBN 978-976-640-192-4120pp 8.5 x 11US$32 (s) Paper
The British Army in the West IndiesSociety and the Military in the Revolutionary AgeRoger Norman Buckley1998ISBN 978-976-640-063-7462pp 6 x 9US$47 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
Caribbean Wars UntoldA Salute to the British WestIndiesHumphrey Metzgen,John Graham2007ISBN 978-976-640-203-7248pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
British-ControlledTrinidad and VenezuelaA History of EconomicInterests and Subversions,1830–1962Kelvin Singh2010ISBN 978-976-640-237-2316pp 6 x 9US$44 (s) Paper
The Colonial Caribbeanin Transition Essays onPostemancipation Socialand Cultural HistoryBridget Brereton, KevinA. Yelvington (eds.)1999ISBN 978-976-640-030-9344pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
Chancellor, I Present . . .Outstanding Achievementand ExcellenceEdward Baugh1998ISBN 978-976-8125-51-4132pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
The Chinese in the West Indies 1806–1995A Documentary HistoryWalton Look Lai1998ISBN 978-976-640-021-7320pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
Christianity in theCaribbeanEssays on Church HistoryArmando Lampe (ed.)2001ISBN 978-976-640-029-3294pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
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Colonial West IndianStudents in BritainLloyd Braithwaite2001ISBN 978-976-640-052-1324pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
Colonialism andResistance in BelizeEssays in HistoricalSociologyO. Nigel Bolland2003ISBN 978-976-640-141-2240pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
Combermere School and the BarbadianSocietyKeith A.P. Sandiford,Earle H. Newton1995ISBN 978-976-640-014-9192pp 6 x 9US$18 (s) Paper
Contrary Voices
Representations of West Indian Slavery, 1657–1834Karina Williamson (ed.)2008ISBN 978-976-640-208-2270pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
Contemporary CaribbeanCultures and Societies in a Global ContextFranklin W. Knight, TeresitaMartínez-Vergne (eds.)2005ISBN 978-976-640-184-9350pp 6 x 9US$37 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
Crossroads of EmpireThe Europe-CaribbeanConnection 1492–1992Alan Cobley (ed.)1994ISBN 978-976-621-031-1142pp 6 x 9US$18 (s) Paper
Cultural Power, Resistance and PluralismColonial Guyana 1838–1900Brian Moore1995ISBN 978-976-640-006-4392pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
The Development ofWest Indies CricketVol. 1 The Age ofNationalismHilary McD. Beckles1998ISBN 978-976-640-064-4256pp 6 x 9US$35 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
The Development ofWest Indies CricketVol. 2 The Age ofGlobalizationHilary McD. Beckles1998ISBN 978-976-640-065-1210pp 6 x 9US$35 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
The Earliest InhabitantsThe Dynamics of theJamaican TainoLesley-Gail Atkinson(ed.)2006ISBN 978-976-640-149-8250pp 7 x 10US$37 (s) Paper
Edward Seaga and theChallenges of ModernJamaicaPatrick E. Bryan2009ISBN 978-976-640-222-8 ClothISBN 978-976-640-250-1 Paper480pp 7 x 10US$55 (s) ClothUS$30 (s) Paper
Depression to DecolonizationBarclays Bank (DCO) in the West Indies, 1926–1962Kathleen E. A. Monteith2008ISBN 978-976-640-198-6300pp 7 x 10US$32 (s) Paper
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Emancipation IVA Series of Lectures toCommemorate the 150thAnniversary of EmancipationWoodville Marshall (ed.)1993ISBN 978-976-8125-02-6144pp 6 x 9US$18 (s) Paper
Endless EducationMain Currents in theEducation System ofModern Trinidad andTobago 1939–1986Carl C. Campbell1997ISBN 978-976-640-032-3276pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
A History of Education in the British LeewardIslands, 1838–1945Howard A. Fergus2003ISBN 978-976-640-131-3248pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
In Miserable SlaveryThomas Thistlewood inJamaica, 1750–86Douglas Hall1999 (1989)ISBN 978-976-640-066-8344pp 5.5 x 8.5US$22 (s) Paper
The First West Indies Cricket TourCanada and the United States in 1886Hilary McD. Beckles2006ISBN 978-976-8125-86-6144pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
Flight to FreedomAfrican Runaways and Maroons in the AmericasAlvin O. Thompson2006ISBN 978-976-640-180-1400pp 6 x 9US$42 (s) Paper
From Occupation toIndependence A ShortHistory of the Peoples ofthe English-SpeakingCaribbean RegionRichard Hart1998ISBN 978-976-8125-52-1150pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
Gallery MontserratSome Prominent People in Our HistoryHoward A. Fergus1996ISBN 978-976-8125-25-5176pp 6 x 9US$18 (s) Paper
A Historical Study ofWomen in Jamaica,1655–1844Lucille Mathurin Mair;Hilary McD. Beckles,Verene A. Shepherd (eds.)2006ISBN 978-976-640-178-8400pp 6 x 9US$42 (s) Paper
A History of the VirginIslands of the UnitedStatesIsaac Dookhan1994 (1974)ISBN 978-976-8125-05-7336pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
Identity and Secession inthe CaribbeanTobago versus Trinidad,1889–1980Learie Luke2007ISBN 978-976-640-199-3350pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
If the Irish Ran theWorldMontserrat, 1630–1730Donald HarmanAkenson1997ISBN 978-976-640-041-5288pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
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Indo-Caribbean IndentureResistance and Accommod-ation, 1838–1920Lomarsh Roopnarine2006ISBN 978-976-640-185-6192pp 6 x 9 US$27 (s) Paper
Jamaica SurveyedPlantation Maps and Plansof the Eighteenth andNineteenth CenturiesB.W. Higman2001 (1988)ISBN 978-976-640-113-9322pp 8.5 x 11US$70 (s) Cloth
Insurgent CubaRace, Nation, andRevolution, 1868–1898Ada Ferrer1999ISBN 978-976-640-080-4284pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
Inside SlaveryProcess and Legacy in theCaribbean ExperienceHilary McD. Beckles (ed.)1996ISBN 978-976-8125-19-4168pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
Jamaica in Slavery and FreedomHistory, Heritage andCultureKathleen Monteith,Glen Richards (eds.)2002ISBN 978-976-640-108-5320pp 6 x 9US$42 (s) Paper
Jamaica in 1687The Taylor Manuscript at the National Library of JamaicaDavid Buisseret2008ISBN 978-976-640-166-5 ClothISBN 978-976-640-236-5 Paper350pp 7 x 10US$65 (s) ClothUS$30 (s) Paper
Jamaican Food
History, Biology, CultureB.W. Higman2008ISBN 978-976-640-205-1600pp 7 x 10US$75 (s) Cloth
The Jamaican People1880–1902 Race, Class and SocialControlPatrick Bryan2000 (1991)ISBN 978-976-640-094-1320pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
Jamaican Place NamesB.W. Higman, B.J. Hudson2009ISBN 978-976-640-217-4296pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
Joseph Ruhomon’s IndiaThe Progress of Her Peopleat Home and Abroad andHow Those in BritishGuyana May ImproveThemselvesClem Seecharan2001ISBN 978-976-640-095-890pp 6 x 9US$20 Paper
The Language of DressResistance andAccommodation inJamaica, 1760–1890Steeve O. Buckridge2004ISBN 978-976-640-143-6298pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
Lady Nugent’s Journal of Her Residence inJamaica from 1801 to1805A New and Revised EditionPhilip Wright (ed.)2002 (1966)ISBN 978-976-640-128-3360pp 6 X 9US$32 (s) Paper
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Law, Justice and EmpireThe Colonial Career of John Gorrie 1829–1892Bridget Brereton1997ISBN 978-976-640-035-4392pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
Lawyer ManleyVol. 1 First Time UpJackie Ranston1999ISBN 978-976-640-081-1 ClothISBN 978-976-640-082-8 Paper244pp 6 x 9US$45 (s) ClothUS$27 (s) Paper
Maharani’s MiseryNarratives of a Passagefrom India to the CaribbeanVerene A. Shepherd2002ISBN 978-976-640-121-4208pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
A Man DividedMichael Garfield Smith,Jamaican Poet andAnthropologist 1921–1993Douglas Hall1997ISBN 978-976-640-034-7182pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
Manuscript Sources forthe History of the WestIndiesK.E. Ingram2000ISBN 978-976-640-025-5588pp 7 x 10US$70 (s) Cloth
Maroon Heritage:Archaeological,Ethnographic andHistorical PerspectivesE. Kofi Agorsah (ed.)1994ISBN 978-976-8125-10-1230pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
Mastery, Tyranny, andDesire The Anglo-Jamaican World of ThomasThistlewood and HisSlaves, 1750–1786Trevor Burnard2004ISBN 978-976-640-146-7334pp 6 x 9US$37 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
Modern BlacknessNationalism, Globalization,and the Politics of Culture in JamaicaDeborah A. Thomas2005ISBN 978-976-640-162-7368pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
The Modern CaribbeanFranklin W. Knight, ColinPalmer (eds.)1989ISBN 978-080-784-240-9396pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
Montpelier, JamaicaA Plantation Community in Slavery and Freedom1739–1912
B.W. Higman1998ISBN 978-976-640-075-0 ClothISBN 978-976-640-039-2 Paper400pp 7 x 10US$85 (s) ClothUS$47 (s) Paper
Mona, Past and Present The History and Heritage of the MonaCampus, University of the West IndiesSuzanne Francis Brown2004ISBN 978-976-640-158-0 ClothISBN 978-976-640-159-7 Paper76pp 11 x 8.5US$35 (s) ClothUS$22 (s) Paper
Neither Led nor Driven Contesting British CulturalImperialism in Jamaica,1865–1920Brian L. Moore, Michele A. Johnson2004ISBN 978-976-640-155-9 ClothISBN 978-976-640-154-2 Paper495pp 6 x 9US$70 (s) ClothUS$37 (s) Paper
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No Bond but the LawPunishment, Race, andGender in Jamaican StateFormation, 1780–1870Diana Paton2005ISBN 978-976-640-161-0300pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
Our Cause for His GloryChristianisation andEmancipation in JamaicaShirley C. Gordon1998ISBN 978-976-640-051-4170pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
Plantation Jamaica, 1750–1850Capital and Control in a Colonial EconomyB.W. Higman2005ISBN 978-976-640-165-8 ClothISBN 978-976-640-209-9 Paper400pp 7 x 10US$70 (s) ClothUS$32 (s) Paper
The Political Economy of Fertility in the BritishWest Indies 1891–1921Dennis A.V. Brown2000ISBN 978-976-410-124-6ISSN 0799-0057144pp 6 x 9US$20 (s) Paper
Port Royal, JamaicaMichael Pawson, David Buisseret2000 (1974)ISBN 978-976-640-072-9264pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
The Portuguese Jews of JamaicaMordechai Arbell2000ISBN 978-976-8125-69-986pp 6 x 9US$20 Paper
The Rebel Woman in the BritishWest Indies during SlaveryLucille Mathurin Mair2007 (1975)ISBN 978-976-640-206-864pp 8.5 x 7.5US$15 (s) Paper
The Shaping of the WestIndian Church 1492–1962Arthur Charles Dayfoot1999ISBN 978-976-640-061-3378pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
Slave Population andEconomy in Jamaica1807–1834B.W. Higman1995 (1976)ISBN 978-976-640-008-8348pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
Slave Populations of the British Caribbean1807–1834B.W. Higman1996 (1984)ISBN 978-976-640-010-1806pp 6 x 9US$37 (s) Paper
Slave Society in theDanish West IndiesSt Thomas, St John and St CroixNeville A.T. Hall; B.W. Higman (ed.)1994 (1992)ISBN 978-976-410-029-4314pp 6 x 9US$20 (s) Paper
Slavery, Freedom and Gender The Dynamicsof Caribbean SocietyBrian Moore, B.W.Higman, Carl C. Campbell,Patrick Bryan (eds.)2002ISBN 978-976-640-137-5320pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
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Slaves and MissionariesThe Disintegration ofJamaican Slave Society,1787–1834Mary Turner1998 (1982)ISBN 978-976-640-045-3232pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
Slaves Who AbolishedSlavery Blacks in RebellionRichard Hart2002 (1985)ISBN 978-976-640-110-8350pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
A Spirit of DominanceCricket and Nationalism in the West IndiesHilary McD. Beckles (ed.)1998ISBN 978-976-8125-37-8194pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
Sugar and SlaveryAn Economic History of the British West Indies,1623–1775Richard B. Sheridan2000 (1974)ISBN 978-976-8125-13-2546pp 6 x 9US$30 (s) Paper
Sugar and SlavesThe Rise of the Planter Class in the English WestIndies, 1624–1713Richard S. Dunn2000 (1973)ISBN 978-976-640-089-7388pp 6 x 9US$25 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
They Do As They PleaseThe Jamaican Struggle for CulturalFreedom after Morant BayBrian L. Moore, Michele A. Johnson2011ISBN 978-976-640-244-0 ClothISBN 978-976-640-245-7 Paper620pp 6 x 9US$65 (s) Cloth US$45 (s) Paper
Time for ActionReport of the West Indian CommissionPostscript by Sir Shridath Ramphal1994 (1992)ISBN 978-976-640-004-0632pp 6 x 9US$28 (s) Paper
Tobago in Wartime1793–1815K.O. Laurence1995ISBN 978-976-640-003-3288pp 6 x 9US$18 (s) Paper
Towards DecolonisationPolitical, Labour andEconomic Developmentin Jamaica 1938–1945Richard Hart1999ISBN 978-976-8125-33-0352pp 6 x 9US$37 (s) Paper
The University of theWest IndiesA QuinquagenaryCalendar 1948–1998Douglas Hall1998ISBN 978-976-640-073-6146pp 6 x 9US$42 (s) Paper
The Struggles of John Brown RusswurmThe Life and Writings of aPan-Africanist Pioneer,1799–1851Winston James2010ISBN 978-976-640-249-5288pp 6 x 9US$30 PaperCaribbean rights
UWI Cave Hill Forty Years – A Celebration Henry Fraser, MichaelGill, Alan Cobley,Woodville Marshall (eds.)2003ISBN 978-976-640-142-9224pp 11 x 12US$75 (s) Cloth
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Unprofitable ServantsCrown Slaves in Berbice,Guyana, 1803–1831Alvin O. Thompson2002ISBN 978-976-640-120-7322pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
The UnappropriatedPeopleFreedmen in the SlaveSociety of BarbadosJerome S. Handler2009ISBN 978-976-640-218-1240pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
West Indies AccountsEssays on the History of the British Caribbean and the Atlantic Economy inHonour of Richard SheridanRoderick McDonald (ed.)1996ISBN 978-976-640-022-4404pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
West Indian BusinessHistoryEnterprise andEntrepreneurshipB.W. Higman, KathleenE.A. Monteith (eds.)2010ISBN 978-976-640-240-2248pp 6 x 9US$35 (s) Paper
When Me Was a BoyCharles Hyatt2007 (1989) ISBN 978-976-640-202-0168pp 4.5 x 7US$15 Paper
Woodside, Pear TreeGrove P.O.Erna Brodber2004ISBN 978-976-640-152-8195pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
The Young ColonialsA Social History of Education in Trinidad and Tobago 1834–1939Carl C. Campbell1996ISBN 978-976-640-011-8394pp 6 x 9US$28 (s) Paper
White RebelThe Life and Times of T.T. LewisGary Lewis1999ISBN 978-976-640-043-9242pp 6 x 9US$30 (s) Paper
CaribbeanLiterature
Abandoning DeadMetaphorsThe Caribbean Phase ofDerek Walcott’s PoetryPatricia Ismond2001ISBN 978-976-640-107-8356pp 6 x 9US$32 Paper
Adolphus, A Tale & The Slave SonLise Winer (ed.)2003ISBN 978-976-640-133-7448pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
Women in GrenadianHistory, 1783–1983Nicole Laurine Phillip2010ISBN 978-976-640-225-9256pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
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The Autobiography ofAlfred H. Mendes,1897–1991Alfred Mendes; Michèle Levy (ed.)2002ISBN 978-976-640-117-7224pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
Clear Word and ThirdSight Folk Groundings andDiasporic Consciousness in African Caribbean WritingCatherine A. John2003ISBN 978-976-640-147-4244pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
Diasporic (Dis)locationsIndo-Caribbean WomenWriters Negotiate the Kala PaniBrinda J. Mehta2004ISBN 978-976-640-157-3279pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
The Devil in the DetailsCuban Antislavery Narrativein the Postmodern AgeClaudette M. Williams2010ISBN 978-976-640-231-0200pp 6 x 9US$20 (s) Paper
The Fiction of RobertAntoniWriting in the EstuaryRichard F. Patterson2010ISBN 978-976-640-229-7224pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
Deconstruction,Imperialism and theWest Indian NovelGlyne A. Griffith1996ISBN 978-976-640-012-5170pp 6 x 9US$18 (s) Paper
Exploring the Palace of the PeacockEssays on Wilson HarrisJoyce Sparer Adler;Irving Adler (ed.)2003ISBN 978-976-640-140-5148pp 6 x 9US$22 Paper
The Francophone Caribbean TodayLiterature, Language, CultureGertrud Aub-Buscher,Beverly Ormerod Noakes(eds.)2003ISBN 978-976-640-130-6216pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
From Nation to DiasporaSamuel Selvon, GeorgeLamming and the CulturalPerformance of GenderCurdella Forbes2005ISBN 978-976-640-171-9320pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
“The Man Who RanAway” and other Storiesof Trinidad in the 1920sand 1930sAlfred H. Mendes;Michèle Levy (ed.)2006ISBN 978-976-640-173-3248pp 6 x 9US$27 Paper
Out of Order!Anthony Winkler and White West Indian WritingKim Robinson-Walcott2005ISBN 978-976-640-172-6240pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
Philosophy in the WestIndian NovelEarl McKenzie2009ISBN 978-976-640-215-0168pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
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Rupert GrayA Tale in Black and WhiteStephen N. Cobham;Lise Winer (ed.)2006ISBN 978-976-640-182-5200pp 6 x 9US$32 Paper
Warner ArundellThe Adventures ofa CreoleE.L. Joseph;Lise Winer (ed.)2001ISBN 978-976-640-109-2576pp 6 x 9US$42 Paper
Economics
A to Z of Industrial Relations in the Caribbean WorkplaceGeorge J. Phillip, Benthan H. Hussey2006ISBN 978-976-8125-82-8 ClothISBN 978-976-8125-83-5 Paper262pp 6 x 9US$45 (s) ClothUS$27 (s) Paper
Competitiveness inSmall DevelopingEconomiesInsights from theCaribbeanAlvin Wint2003ISBN 978-976-640-132-0250pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
Consequences ofStructural AdjustmentA Review of the JamaicanExperienceElsie Le Franc (ed.)1994ISBN 978-976-8125-12-5240pp 6 x 9US$18 (s) Paper
The EconomicDevelopment of BarbadosMichael Howard2006ISBN 978-976-640-188-7200pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
Empowering a Peasantryin a Caribbean ContextThe Case of Land SettlementSchemes in Guyana,1865–1985Carl B. Greenidge2001ISBN 978-976-640-068-2240pp 6 x 9US$25 (s) Paper
Don’t Burn Our BridgesThe Case for OwningAirlinesJean S. Holder2010ISBN 978-976-640-232-7288pp 6 x 9US$37 (s) Paper
The Economics ofDevelopment in SmallCountries, With Special Reference tothe CaribbeanWilliam G. Demas2010ISBN 978-976-640-223-5176pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
Essays on the Theory ofPlantation EconomyAn Institutional and HistoricalApproach to CaribbeanEconomic DevelopmentLloyd Best, Kari Levitt2009ISBN 978-976-640-211-2280pp 6 x 9US$37 (s) Paper
Export/Import Trends andEconomic Development inTrinidad, 1919–1939Doddridge H.N. Alleyne2010ISBN 978-976-8125-91-0376pp 6 x 9US$45 (s) Paper
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The George Beckford PapersGeorge Beckford; Kari Levitt (ed.)2000ISBN 978-976-8125-75-0 ClothISBN 978-976-8125-40-8 Paper540pp 6 x 9US$45 (s) ClothUS$30 (s) Paper
Low-Cost Housing inBarbadosEvolution or SocialRevolution?Mark R. Watson, Robert B. Potter2001ISBN 978-976-640-048-4428pp 6 x 9US$30 (s) Paper
A History of Money andBanking in Barbados,1627–1973Eric Armstrong2010ISBN 978-976-640-239-6172pp 6 x 9US$25 (s) Paper
Pastoral Care in a Market EconomyA Caribbean PerspectiveS. St John Redwood1999ISBN 978-976-8125-49-1146pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
Low-Income Housing and the State in theEastern CaribbeanRobert B. Potter1995ISBN 978-976-640-005-788pp 6 x 9US$18 (s) Paper
Persistent PovertyUnderdevelopment in Plantation Economies of the Third WorldGeorge Beckford1999 (1972)ISBN 978-976-640-087-3 ClothISBN 978-976-640-074-3 Paper340pp 5.5 x 8.5US$40 (s) ClothUS$25 (s) Paper
A Practical Introduction toEconometric MethodsClassical and ModernPatrick Watson, Sonja Teelucksingh2002ISBN 978-976-640-122-1ClothISBN 978-976-640-247-1 Paper320pp 7 x 10US$65 (s) ClothUS$40 (s) Paper
Poverty, Empowermentand Social Developmentin the CaribbeanNorman Girvan (ed.)1997ISBN 978-976-8125-36-1176pp 6 x 9US$20 (s) Paper
Psychonomics andPovertyTowards Governance and a Civil SocietyRamesh Deosaran2000ISBN 978-976-640-086-6304pp 8 x 10US$47 (s) Paper
Public Sector Economicsfor Developing CountriesSecond EditionMichael Howard,Althea La Foucade, andEwan Scott (eds.)2010ISBN 978-976-640-224-2420pp 7 x 10US$47 (s) Paper
Poverty and Perceptionin JamaicaA Comparative Analysis ofJamaican HouseholdsWarren A. Benfield2010ISBN 978-976-640-230-3192pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
Self-Help Housing, thePoor, and the State in the CaribbeanRobert B. Potter, DennisConway (eds.)1997ISBN 978-976-640-024-8314pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
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Stabilization andStagnation in theJamaican Economy1972–97George Beckford LectureSeries 4Owen Jefferson1999ISBN 978-976-8125-56-936pp 6 x 9US$10 (s) Paper
Survival by AssociationSupply ManagementLandscape of the EasternCaribbeanBarbara M. Welch1996ISBN 978-976-640-027-9386pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
Theoretical andEmpirical Exercises inEconometricsNlandu Mamingi2005ISBN 978-976-640-176-4312pp 7 x 10US$55 (s) Cloth
Tourism AttractionsA Critical Analysis of ThisSubsector in JamaicaLorna-Dee Dunn1999ISBN 978-976-8125-57-696pp 8 x 10US$30 (s) Paper
Tourism and HospitalityEducation and Trainingin the CaribbeanChandanaJayawardena (ed.)2003ISBN 978-976-640-119-1350pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
The Brain TrainQuality Higher Education andCaribbean DevelopmentHilary McD. Beckles, Anthony Perry, Peter Whiteley2002ISBN 978-976-410-194-9136pp 8.5 x 11US$22 (s) Paper
Education
Caribbean Adolescentsand YouthContemporary Issues inPersonality Developmentand BehaviourArthur G. Richardson1999ISBN 978-187-843-327-5238pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
Cases on Issues andProblems in EducationalManagementSonia O. Jones2000ISBN 978-976-8125-35-4384pp 7 x 10US$40 (s) Paper
Higher Education in the CaribbeanPast, Present and FutureDirectionsGlenford Howe (ed.)2000ISBN 978-976-640-079-8392pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
Inside Jamaican SchoolsHyacinth Evans2001ISBN 978-976-640-097-2174pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
Inside Hillview HighSchool
An Ethnography of anUrban Jamaican SchoolHyacinth Evans2006ISBN 978-976-640-194-8200pp 6 x 9 US$37 (s) Paper
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ResearchThe Journey fromPondering to PublishingSerwan M.J. Baban(ed.)2009ISBN 978-976-8125-90-3208pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
EnvironmentalStudies
Social Studies Curriculumand Methods for theCaribbeanAnthony D. Griffith, James L. Barth2006ISBN 978-976-640-125-2288pp 7 x 10US$32 (s) Paper
Caribbean Geology intothe Third MillenniumTransactions of theFifteenth CaribbeanGeological ConferenceTrevor A. Jackson (ed.)2002ISBN 978-976-640-100-9288pp 8.5 x 11US$37 (s) Paper
Economy and Environmentin the CaribbeanBarbados and the Windwardsin the late 1800sBonham C. Richardson1998ISBN 978-976-640-038-5312pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
Bats of Puerto RicoAn Island Focus and aCaribbean PerspectiveMichael R. Gannon,Allen Kurta, ArmandoRodríguez-Durán,Michael R. Willig2005ISBN 978-976-640-175-7224pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
Enduring Geohazards in the CaribbeanMoving from the Reactiveto the ProactiveSerwan M. J. Baban (ed.)2008ISBN 978-976-640-204-4300pp 6 x 9US$42 (s) Paper
Environment andDevelopment in theCaribbeanGeographical PerspectivesDavid Barker, DuncanF.M. McGregor (eds.)1995ISBN 978-976-640-007-1320pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
Farmers and SoilConservation in theCaribbeanUWICED Occasional Paper Series No. 3Frank A. Gumbs1997ISBN 978-976-8125-29-3154pp 6 x 9US$18 (s) Paper
Global Change and Caribbean VulnerabilityEnvironment, Economy andSociety at RiskDuncan McGregor, DavidDodman, David Barker (eds.)2009ISBN 978-976-640-221-1410pp 6 x 9US$42 (s) Paper
A Guide to Plants inthe Blue Mountains of JamaicaSusan Iremonger2002ISBN 978-976-640-031-6220pp 6 x 9US$47 (s) Paper
How to Make Our Own NewsA Primer for Environmentalists and JournalistsJohn Maxwell2000ISBN 978-976-8125-64-4184pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
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Jamaica UndergroundThe Caves, Sinkholes andUnderground Rivers of the IslandAlan G. Fincham1997ISBN 978-976-640-055-2 ClothISBN 978-976-640-036-1 Paper464pp 8.5 x 11US$75 (s) ClothUS$47 (s) Paper
Natural ResourceManagement forSustainable Developmentin the CaribbeanIvan Goodbody, ElizabethThomas-Hope (eds.)2002ISBN 978-976-8125-76-7416pp 6.25 x 9.25US$32 (s) Paper
The Political Ecology of Bananas ContractFarming, Peasants, andAgrarian Change in theEastern CaribbeanLawrence S. Grossman1998ISBN 978-976-640-059-0288pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
Recognizing and ControllingNematode Damage on SomeCrops Grown in JamaicaDave George Hutton1993ISBN 978-976-8125-00-252pp 11 x 8.5US$18 (s) Paper
Resources, Planning and EnvironmentalManagement in aChanging CaribbeanDavid Barker, Duncan McGregor (eds.)2003ISBN 978-976-640-134-4282pp 6 x 9 US$42 (s) Paper
Resource Sustainabilityand CaribbeanDevelopmentDuncan F.M. McGregor,David Barker, SallyLloyd Evans (eds.)1998ISBN 978-976-640-067-5428pp 6 x 9US$42 (s) Paper
Small Farmers and the Protection of theWatershedsThe Experience of Jamaica since the 1950sDavid T. Edwards1995ISBN 978-976-8125-20-0120pp 5.5 x 8.5US$20 (s) Paper
Solid WasteManagementCritical Issues forDeveloping CountriesElizabeth Thomas-Hope(ed.)1998ISBN 978-976-8125-43-9296pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
The Waterfalls of JamaicaSublime and Beautiful ObjectsBrian J. Hudson2001ISBN 978-976-640-083-5 ClothISBN 978-976-640-102-3 Paper138pp 6 x 9US$27 Cloth US$22 Paper
Gender Studies
Caribbean Women at the CrossroadsThe Paradox of Motherhoodamong Women ofBarbados, St Lucia andDominicaPatricia Mohammed,Althea Perkins1999ISBN 978-976-8125-44-6150pp 7 x 10US$22 (s) Paper
Confronting Power,Theorizing GenderInterdisciplinaryPerspectives in theCaribbeanEudine Barriteau (ed.)2003ISBN 978-976-640-136-8414pp 6 x 9US$42 (s) Paper
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Gender in CaribbeanDevelopmentPatricia Mohammed,Catherine Shepherd(eds.)1999 (1988)ISBN 978-976-8125-55-2374pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
Enjoying Power
Eugenia Charles andPolitical Leadership in theCommonwealth CaribbeanEudine Barriteau, Alan Cobley (eds.)2006ISBN 978-976-640-191-7288pp 6 x 9 US$32 Paper
Cultural DNAGender at the Root ofEveryday Life in RuralJamaicaDiana J. Fox2010ISBN 978-976-640-219-8296pp 6 x 9US$37 (s) Paper
Gendered RealitiesEssays in CaribbeanFeminist ThoughtPatricia Mohammed(ed.)2002ISBN 978-976-640-112-2544pp 6 x 9US$47 (s) Paper
Gender Segregation inthe Barbadian LabourMarket 1946 and 1980Roslyn Lynch1995ISBN 978-976-410-078-2ISSN 0799-0057100pp 6 x 9US$18 (s) Paper
Interrogating CaribbeanMasculinitiesTheoretical and Empirical AnalysesRhoda Reddock (ed.)2004ISBN 978-976-640-138-2454pp 6 x 9US$47 (s) Paper
Male Under-achieve-ment in High SchoolEducationin Jamaica, Barbados, and St Vincent and the GrenadinesOdette ParryISBN 978-976-8125-73-6240pp 6 x 9US$20 (s) Paper
My Mother WhoFathered Me A Study of the Families in ThreeSelected Communities of JamaicaEdith Clarke1999 (1957)ISBN 978-976-640-040-8266pp 6 x 9US$25 Paper
Midlife and OlderWomenFamily Life,Work andHealth in JamaicaJoan Rawlins2006ISBN 978-976-640-183-2185pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
Learning to Be a ManCulture, Socialization andGender Identity in FiveCaribbean CommunitiesBarry Chevannes2001ISBN 978-976-640-092-7252pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
Patriarchy in theJamaica ConstabularyForceIts Impact on GenderEqualityGladys Brown-Campbell1998ISBN 978-976-8125-58-366pp 6 x 9US$18 (s) Paper
Stronger, Surer, BolderRuth Nita Barrow – SocialChange and International DevelopmentEudine Barriteau, Alan Cobley (eds.)2001ISBN 978-976-640-101-6234pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
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Trailblazers in NursingEducationA Caribbean PerspectiveHermi Hyacinth Hewitt2002ISBN 978-976-8125-78-1290pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
Women and the LawA Bibliographical Survey of Legal and Quasi-LegalMaterialsJoan A. Brathwaite (comp.)1999ISBN 978-976-640-069-9368pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
Women in JamaicaA Bibliography of Published and Unpublished SourcesLeona Bobb-Semple (comp.)1997ISBN 978-976-640-033-0138pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
Women and the SexualDivision of Labour in the CaribbeanKeith Hart (ed.)1996 (1989)ISBN 978-976-8125-18-7174pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
The Administration andConduct of Corporate MeetingsWith Appendixes, Precedents andShareholders’ QuestionsGrenville W. Phillips1996ISBN 978-976-8125-26-2 ClothISBN 978-976-8125-27-9 Paper470pp 6 x 9US$55 (s) ClothUS$37 (s) Paper
Commercial Arbitrationin the CaribbeanA Practical GuideM.J. Stoppi2001ISBN 978-976-640-106-1354pp 7 x 10 US$50 (s) Cloth
Legal Studies
CascadeA NovelBarbara Lalla2010ISBN 978-976-640-233-4308pp 6 x 9US$18 Paper
Haiti RisingHaitian History, Culture andthe Earthquake of 2010Martin Munro (ed.)2010ISBN 978-976-640-248-8224pp 6 x 9US$25 PaperUS and Caribbean rights
Jamaican GoldJamaican SprintersRachel Irving, VilmaCharlton (eds.)2010ISBN 978-976-640-234-1160pp 8.5 x 10US$25 Paper
Jamaican TheatreHighlights of thePerforming Arts in theTwentieth CenturyWycliffe Bennett, Hazel Bennett2011ISBN 978-976-640-226-6440pp 9 x 11US$60 Paper
GeneralInterest
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Elements of Child Lawin the CommonwealthCaribbeanZanifa McDowell2000ISBN 978-976-640-085-9352pp 6 x 9US$47 (s) Paper
Taxation and Equity inJamaica 1985–1992Who Bears the Burden?Dillon Alleyne1999ISBN 978-976-410-122-2ISSN 0799-0057116pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
An Introduction toCompany Law in theCommonwealth Caribbean
Rambarran Mangal2001ISBN 978-976-8125-21-7260pp 6 x 9 US$32 (s) Paper
Medical Studies
After the Storm There Is the CalmAn Analysis of theBereavement ProcessAudrey M. Pottinger1999ISBN 978-976-8125-50-7106pp 6 x 9US$22 Paper
Basic Practical UrologyL. Lawson Douglas2001ISBN 978-976-8125-42-2170pp 7 x 10US$55 (s) Paper
Biochemistry byDiagramsE.Y. St A. Morrison1995ISBN 978-976-8125-17-0102pp 8.5 x 11US$15 (s) Paper
The Caribbean AIDSEpidemicGlenford Howe, AlanCobley (eds.)2000ISBN 978-976-640-088-0286pp 6 x 9US$32 Paper
Ethical Practice inEveryday Health CareE.R. Walrond2005ISBN 978-976-640-164-1180pp 7 x 10US$27 (s) Paper
An Introduction toSpectroscopy, AtomicStructure and Chemical BondingTerry L. Meek1998ISBN 978-976-8125-41-5214pp 7.5 x 10US$32 (s) Paper
Health Communicationin the Caribbean andBeyondGodfrey Steele (ed.)2011ISBN 978-976-640-241-9350pp 7 x 10US$50 (s) Paper
On the Treatment andManagement of the More Common West-IndiaDiseases, 1750–1802J. Edward Hutson (ed.)2005ISBN 978-976-640-177-1 ClothISBN 978-976-640-235-8 Paper204pp 6 x 9US$65 (s) ClothUS$20 (s) Paper
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A Crime-solving Toolkit Forensics in the CaribbeanBasil A. Reid (ed.)2009ISBN 978-976-640-220-4196pp 7 x 10US$27 (s) Paper
Caribbean Revolutionsand RevolutionaryTheoryAn Assessment of Cuba,Nicaragua and GrenadaBrian Meeks2001 (1993)ISBN 978-976-640-104-7220pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
Between Self-Determination andDependencyJamaica’s Foreign Relations 1972–1989Holger Henke2000ISBN 978-976-640-058-3240pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
Political Science
Demeaned butEmpowered The Social Power of theUrban Poor in JamaicaObika Gray2004ISBN 978-976-640-153-5440pp 6 x 9US$37 (s) Paper
The Empowering ImpulseThe Nationalist Tradition of BarbadosGlenford D. Howe, Don D. Marshall (eds.)2001ISBN 978-976-8125-74-3368pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
Envisioning CaribbeanFuturesJamaican PerspectivesBrian Meeks2007ISBN 978-976-640-200-6212pp 6 x 9US$37 (s) Paper
Eric Williams
The Myth and the ManSelwyn Ryan2009ISBN 978-976-640-207-5856pp 6 X 9 US$75 (s) Cloth
Evaluation, Learning andCaribbean DevelopmentStudies in Caribbean PublicPolicy 1Deryck R. Brown (ed.)1998 ISBN 978-976-8125-28-6506pp 6 x 9US$37 (s) Paper
Ideology and CaribbeanIntegrationIan Boxill1997ISBN 978-976-410-045-4ISSN 0799-0057150pp 6 x 9US$18 (s) Paper
Ideology and ChangeThe Transformation of theCaribbean LeftPerry Mars1998ISBN 978-976-640-057-6246pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
In the Service of thePublicArticles and Speeches1963–1993, withCommentariesJ.R.P. Dumas1995ISBN 978-976-8125-24-8484pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
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The Mechanics ofIndependencePatterns of Political andEconomic Transformation inTrinidad and TobagoA.N.R. Robinson2002 (1971)ISBN 978-976-640-115-3226pp 6 x 9US$50 (s) Cloth
Modern Political Culturein the CaribbeanHolger Henke, FredReno (eds.)2003ISBN 978-976-640-135-1476pp 6 x 9US$47 (s) Paper
An Introduction toPoliticsLectures for First YearStudentsThird EditionTrevor Munroe2002 (1993)ISBN 978-976-8125-79-8122pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
Modernity Disavowed Haiti and the Cultures of Slavery in the Age ofRevolutionSibylle Fischer2004ISBN 978-976-640-151-1250pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) PaperCaribbean rights
Narratives of ResistanceJamaica, Trinidad, TheCaribbeanBrian Meeks2000ISBN 978-976-640-093-4258pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
New Caribbean ThoughtA ReaderBrian Meeks, FolkeLindahl (eds.)2001ISBN 978-976-640-103-0450pp 6 x 9US$47 (s) Paper
Organized Crime and Politics in JamaicaBreaking the NexusAnthony Harriott2008ISBN 978-976-8125-89-7150pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
Police and Crime Control in JamaicaProblems of Reforming Ex-Colonial ConstabulariesAnthony Harriott2000ISBN 978-976-640-076-7264pp 6 x 9US$30 (s) Paper
The Politics of Labourand Development in TrinidadRay Kiely1996ISBN 978-976-640-017-0224pp 6 x 9US$20 (s) Paper
Radical Theory,Caribbean RealityRace, Class and SocialDominationCharles W. Mills2010ISBN 978-976-640-227-3320pp 6 x 9US$32 (s) Paper
Renewing Democracyinto the MillenniumThe Jamaican Experiencein PerspectiveTrevor Munroe1999ISBN 978-976-640-078-1202pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
Surviving Small SizeRegional Integration inCaribbean MinistatesPatsy Lewis2002ISBN 978-976-640-116-0240pp 6 x 9US$37 (s) Paper
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Understanding Crime in JamaicaNew Challenges for Public PolicyAnthony Harriott (ed.)2004ISBN 978-976-640-144-3260pp 6 x 9US$37 (s) Paper
Walter Rodney1968 RevisitedRupert C. Lewis1998 (1994)ISBN 978-976-8125-53-854pp 6 x 9US$10 Paper(no discount)
Current Themes in Social PsychologyDerek Chadee, Jason Young (eds.)2006ISBN 978-976-640-195-5300pp 7 x 10US$37 (s) Paper
Psychology
Sociology
Caribbean MigrationElizabeth Thomas-Hope2002 (1992)ISBN 978-976-640-126-9186pp 6 x 9US$22 (s) Paper
Introduction to SocialResearchWith Applications to theCaribbeanIan Boxill, ClaudiaChambers, Eleanor Wint1997ISBN 978-976-8125-22-4162pp 8.5 x 11US$32 (s) Paper
Returning to the SourceThe Final Stage of theCaribbean Migration CircuitDwaine E. Plaza, Frances Henry (eds.)2006ISBN 978-976-640-174-0300pp 6 x 9US$37 (s) Paper
Selected Issues andProblems in Social PolicyStudies in Caribbean Public Policy 2Deryck R. Brown (ed.)1998ISBN 978-976-8125-45-3308pp 6 x 9US$27 (s) Paper
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Au
thor
Ind
ex
Adler, Irving, 31Adler, Joyce Sparer, 31Agorsah, E. Kofi, 27Akenson, Donald Harman, 25Alleyne, Dillon, 39 Alleyne, Doddridge H.N., 14, 32 Alleyne, Mervyn C., 17, 20, 21, 21Allsopp, Richard, 20, 21Arbell, Mordechai, 28Armstrong, Eric, 15, 33Atkinson, Lesley-Gail, 24Aub-Buscher, Gertrud, 31
Baban, Serwan M.J., 35Barker, David, 35, 36Barker, Patrick L., 19Barriteau, Eudine, 7, 36, 37Barth, James L., 35Baugh, Edward, 23Beckford, George, 16, 33Beckles, Hilary McD., 24, 25, 26, 29, 34Benfield, Warren A., 33Bennett, Hazel, 5, 38Bennett, Wycliffe, 5, 38Best, Curwen, 20Best, Lloyd, 14, 16, 32Bobb-Semple, Leona, 38Bolland, O. Nigel, 24Boxill, Ian, 40, 42Braithwaite, Lloyd, 24 Brathwaite, Kamau, 21Brathwaite, Joan A., 38Branson, Susan, 22Brereton, Bridget, 27, 23Brodber, Erna, 30Brown, Dennis A.V., 28Brown, Deryck R., 40, 42Brown-Campbell, Gladys, 37Bryan, Patrick, 7, 24, 26, 28Buckley, Roger Norman, 23 Buckridge, Steeve O., 26Buisseret, David, 11, 26, 28Burnard, Trevor, 27
Campbell, Carl C., 25, 28, 30Cassidy, Frederic G., 20, 21Chadee, Derek, 18, 42Chambers, Claudia, 42Charlton, Vilma, 2, 38Chevannes, Barry, 21, 37Christie, Pauline, 19, 20Clarke, Edith, 37Cobham, Stephen N., 32Cobley, Alan, 7, 17, 24, 29, 37, 39Conway, Dennis, 33Craig, Ian Stuart, 22
Dayfoot, Arthur Charles, 28Demas, William G., 15, 32Desorasan, Ramesh, 33 Dodman, David, 35Dookhan, Isaac, 25Douglas, L. Lawson, 39Dumas, J.R.R., 40Dunn, Lorna-Dee, 34 Dunn, Richard S., 29
Edwards, David T., 36Evans, Hyacinth, 34
Fergus Howard A., 25 Ferrer, Ada, 26Fincham, Alan G., 36Fischer, Sibylle, 4, 41Forbes, Curdella, 31Ford-Smith, Honor, 21Fox, Diana J., 37Francis Brown, Suzanne, 27Fraser, Henry, 29, 17
Gannon, Michael R., 35Gill, Michael, 29Girvan, Norman, 33Golding, John S., 23Goodbody, Ivan, 36Gordon, Shirley C., 28Graham, John, 23Gray, Obika, 40Greenidge, Carl B., 32Gregory, Howard, 19Griffith, Anthony D., 35Griffith, Ezra E.H., 8, 22Griffith, Glynne A., 3, 31Grossman, Lawrence, 36
Hall, Douglas, 11, 25, 27, 29Hall, Neville A.T., 28Handler, Jerome S., 30Harney, Stefano, 21Harriott, Anthony, 41, 42Hart, Keith, 38Hart, Richard, 25, 29Henke, Holger, 40, 41Henry, Frances, 8, 22, 42Hewitt, Hermi Hyacinth, 38Higman, B.W., 13, 26, 27, 28, 30Holder, Jean S., 14, 32Hope, Donna P., 21Howard, Michael, 15, 32, 33Howe, Glenford, 17, 34, 39, 40Hudson, Brian J., 26, 36
Hussey, Benthan H., 32Hutson, J. Edward, 17, 39Hutton, Dave George, 36Hyatt, Charles, 30
Ingram, K.E., 27Iremonger, Susan, 35 Irving, Rachael, 2, 38Ismond, Patricia, 30
Jackson, Trevor A., 35James, Winston, 6, 29Jayawardena, Chandra, 34Jefferson, Albertina, 22Jefferson, Owen, 34John, Catherine A., 31Johnson, Michele A., 12, 27, 29Jones, Sonia O., 34Joseph, E.L., 32
Kanhai, Rosanne, 9, 19Kiely, Ray, 41Knight, Franklin W., 24, 27Kurta, Allen, 35
LaFleur, Gerard, 22La Foucade, Althea, 15, 33Lalla, Barbara, 3, 19, 21, 38Lampe, Armando, 8, 22Laurence, K.O., 10, 29Le Franc, Elsie, 32LePage, R.B., 20Levitt, Kari, 14, 16, 33Levy, Horace, 19Levy, Michele, 31Lewin, Olive, 22Lewis, Gary, 30Lewis, Patsy, 14, 41Lewis, Rupert C., 42 Lindahl, Folke, 41Lloyd Evans, Sally, 36Look Lai, Walton, 23Luke, Learie, 10, 25Lynch, Roslyn, 37
Mamingi, Nlandu, 16, 34Mangal, Rambarran, 39Mars, Perry, 40Marshall, Don D., 40Marshall, Woodville, 25, 29Martínez-Vergne, Teresita, 24Mathurin Mair, Lucille, 25, 28Maxwell, John, 35McDonald, Roderick A., 6, 23, 30McDowell, Zanifa, 39
Author Index
44
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or
Ind
ex
McGregor, Duncan F.M., 35, 36McKenzie, Earl, 3, 31Meek, Terry L., 39Meeks Brian, 40, 41Mehta, Brinda J., 9, 31 Mendes, Alfred H., 31Metzgen, Humphrey, 23Mills, Charles W., 41Mohammed, Patricia, 36, 37Monteith, Kathleen E.A., 12, 13, 24,26, 30Moore, Brian, 12, 24, 27, 28, 29Morgan, Paula, 9, 22Morrison, E.Y.St A., 39Munro, Martin, 4, 20, 22, 38Munroe, Trevor, 41
Newton, Earle H., 24Noakes, Beverly Ormerod, 31
Palmer, Colin, 27Parry, Odette, 37Paton, Diana, 12, 28Patteson, Richard E., 31Paul, Annie, 19Pawson, Michael, 11, 28Payne-Jackson, Arvilla, 17, 21Perkins, Althea, 36Perry, Anthony, 34Phillip, George J., 32Phillip, Nicole Laurine, 30 Phillips, Grenville W., 38Plaza, Dwaine E., 42
Pollard, Velma, 20Porter, Anthony R.D., 23Potter Robert B., 33Pottinger, Audrey M., 39
Rahim, Jennifer, 19Ramnarine, Tina K., 20Ranston, Jackie, 27Rawlins, Joan, 37Reddock, Rhoda, 37Redwood, S.St John, 33Regis, Louis, 21Reid, Basil, 40Reno, Fred, 41Richards, Glen, 12, 26Richardson, Arthur G., 34Richardson, Bonham C., 35Roberts, Peter A., 21Robertson, Ian, 20Robinson, A.N.R., 41Robinson-Walcott, Kim, 3, 31Rodrígues-Durán, Armando, 35Roopnarine, Lomarsh, 10, 26Ryan, Selwyn, 7, 40
Sánchez, Jairo, 22Sandiford, Keith A.P., 20, 24 Scott, Ewan, 15, 33Seecharan, Clem, 23, 26Shepherd, Catherine, 37Shepherd, Verene A., 9, 25, 27 Sheridan, Richard B., 13, 29
Simmonds-McDonald, Hazel, 20 Singh, Kelvin, 10, 23Sistren, 21 Steele, Godfrey, 18, 39Stoppi, M.J., 38Stuempfle, Stephen, 22
Teelucksingh, Sonja S., 16, 33Thomas, Deborah A., 27Thomas-Hope, Elizabeth, 36, 42Thompson, Alvin O., 25, 30Turner, Grace, 22Turner, Mary, 29
Walcott-Hackshaw, Elizabeth, 4, 20, 22Walrond, E.R., 17, 39Warner-Lewis, Maureen, 6, 8, 20, 22, 23Watson, Mark R., 33Watson, Patrick K., 16, 33Welch, Barbara M., 34Whiteley, Peter, 34 Williams, Claudette M., 31Williamson, Karina, 6, 24Willig, Michael R., 35Winer, Lise, 30, 32Wint, Alvin, 32Wint, Eleanor, 42Wright, Philip, 11, 26
Young, Jason, 18, 42Youssef, Valerie, 9, 22
Author Index
45
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Titl
e I
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ex
A–Z of Industrial Relations in the Caribbean
Workplace, 32Abandoning Dead Metaphors, 30Administration and Conduct of Corporate
Meetings, 38Adolphus, A Tale, and The Slave Son, 30African-Caribbean Worldview and the Making
of Caribbean Society, The, 19After the Storm There Is the Calm, 39Amerindians/Africans/Americans, 22Archibald Monteath, 6, 8, 23Ascent to Mona, 23Autobiography of Alfred H. Mendes, 31
Basic Practical Urology, 39Bats of Puerto Rico, 35Bechu, 23Between Self-Determination and Dependency,
40Between Slavery and Freedom, 6, 23Beyond Borders, 19Bindi, 9, 19Biochemistry by Diagrams, 39Brain Train, The, 34Bricks and Stones from the Past, 23British Army in the West Indies, The, 23British-Controlled Trinidad and Venezuela, 10,
23
Caribbean Adolescents and Youth, 34Caribbean AIDS Epidemic, The, 17, 39Caribbean Culture, 19Caribbean Geology into the Third Millennium,
35Caribbean Language Issues Old and New, 19Caribbean Migration, 42Caribbean Revolutions and Revolutionary
Theory, 40Caribbean Theology, 19Caribbean Wars Untold, 23Caribbean Women at the Crossroads, 36Cascade, 3, 38Cases on Issues and Problems in Educational
Management, 34Central Africa in the Caribbean, 20Centring the Periphery, 19Chancellor, I Present, 23Chinese in the West Indies, The, 23Christianity in the Caribbean, 8, 23Clear Word and Third Sight, 31Colonial Caribbean in Transition, The, 23Colonial West Indian Students in Britain, 24Colonialism and Resistance in Belize, 24 Combermere School and the Barbadian Society, 24
Commercial Arbitration in the Caribbean, 38Competitiveness in Small Developing
Economies, 32Confronting Power, Theorizing Gender, 36Consequences of Structural Adjustment, 32Construction and Representation of Race and
Ethnicity in the Caribbean, The, 20Contemporary Caribbean Cultures and Societies
in the Global Conext, 24Contrary Voices, 6, 24Creating Their Own Space, 20Cricket Nurseries of Colonial Barbados, 20Crime-Solving Toolkit, A, 40Crossroads of Empire, 24Cultural DNA, 37Cultural Power, Resistance and Pluralism, 24Culture @ the Cutting Edge, 20Current Themes in Social Psychology, 18, 42
Deconstruction, Imperialism and the West
Indian Novel, 3, 31Demeaned but Empowered, 40Depression to Decolonization, 13, 24Development of West Indies Cricket, The (vol. 1
& 2), 24Devil in the Details, The, 31Diasporic (Dis)locations, 9, 31Dictionary of Caribbean English Usage, 20Dictionary of Jamaican English, 20Don’t Burn Our Bridges, 14, 32Dread Talk, 20Due Respect, 20
Earliest Inhabitants, The, 24Echoes of the Haitian Revolution, 4, 20Economic Development of Barbados, 15, 32Economics of Development in Small Countries,
15, 32Economy and Environment in the Caribbean, 35Edward Seaga and the Challenges of Modern
Jamaica, 7, 24Elements of Child Law in the Commonwealth
Caribbean, 39Emancipation IV, 25Empowering Impulse, The, 40Empowering a Peasantry in a Caribbean
Context, 32Endless Education, 25Enduring Geohazards in the Caribbean, 35Enjoying Power, 7, 37Environment and Development in the
Caribbean, 35Envisioning Caribbean Futures, 40Eric Williams, 7, 40
Essays on the Theory of Plantation Economy, 14,16, 32
Ethical Practice in Everyday Health Care, 17,39
Evaluation, Learning and Caribbean
Development, 40Exploring the Boundaries of Caribbean Creole
Languages, 20Exploring the Palace of the Peacock, 31Export/Import Trends and Economic
Development in Trinidad, 14, 32
Farmers and Soil Conservation, 35Fiction of Robert Antoni, The, 31First West Indies Cricket Tour, The, 25Flight to Freedom, 25Francophone Caribbean Today, The, 31From Jamaican Creole to Standard English, 20From Nation to Diaspora, 31From Occupation to Independence, 25From Oral to Literate Culture, 21
Gallery Montserrat, 25Gender in Caribbean Development, 37Gender Segregation in the Barbadian Labour
Market, 37Gendered Realities, 37
George Beckford Papers, The, 16, 33Global Change and Caribbean Vulnerability, 35Golokwati (vol. 1 & 2), 21Guide to the Plants in the Blue Mountains of
Jamaica, A, 35
Haiti Rising, 4, 38Health Communication in the Caribbean and
Beyond, 18, 39Higher Education in the Caribbean, 34Historical Study of the Women of Jamaica, A, 25History of Education in the British Leeward
Islands, A, 25History of Money and Banking in Barbados, A,
15, 33History of the Virgin Islands in the United
States, 25How to Make Our Own News, 35
Identity and Secession in the Caribbean, 10, 25Ideology and Caribbean Integration, 40Ideology and Change, 40If the Irish Ran the World, 25In Miserable Slavery, 11, 25In the Service of the Public, 40Indo-Caribbean Indenture, 10, 26Inna di Dancehall, 21
Title Index
46
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tle I
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exInside Hillview High School, 34Inside Jamaican Schools, 34Inside Slavery, 26Insurgent Cuba, 26Interrogating Caribbean Masculinities, 37Introduction to Company Law, An, 39Introduction to Politics, An, 41Introduction to Social Research, 42Introduction to Spectroscopy, Atomic Structure
and Chemical Bonding, An, 39
Jamaican Gold, 2, 38Jamaica in 1687, 11, 26Jamaica in Slavery and Freedom, 12, 26Jamaica Surveyed, 8, 26Jamaica Talk, 21Jamaica Underground, 36Jamaican Folk Medicine, 17, 21Jamaican Food, 26Jamaican Gold, 2, 38Jamaican People, The, 26Jamaican Place Names, 26Jamaican Theatre, 5, 38Joseph Ruhomon’s India, 26
Lady Nugent’s Journal of Her Residence in
Jamaica, 11, 26Language of Dress, The, 26Law, Justice and Empire, 27Lawyer Manley, 27Learning to Be a Man, 37Lionheart Gal, 21Low Cost Housing in Barbados, 33Low-Income Housing and the State in the
Eastern Caribbean, 33
Maharani’s Misery, 9, 27Male Under-Achievement in High School
Education, 37Man Divided, A, 27Man Who Ran Away, The, 31Manuscript Sources for the History of the West
Indies, 27Maroon Heritage, 27Mastery, Tyranny and Desire, 27Mechanics of Independence, The, 41Midlife and Older Women, 37Modern Blackness, 27Modern Caribbean, The, 27Modern Political Culture in the Caribbean, 41Modernity Disavowed, 4, 41Mona, Past and Present, 27Montpelier, Jamaica, 27My Mother Who Fathered Me, 37
Narratives of Resistance, 41Nationalism and Identity, 21Natural Resource Management for Sustainable
Development in the Caribbean, 36
Neither Led nor Driven, 12, 27New Caribbean Thought, 41New Register of Caribbean English Usage, 21No Bond but the Law, 12, 28
On the Treatment and Management of the More
Common West India Diseases, 17, 39
Organized Crime and Politics in Jamaica, 41Our Cause for His Glory, 28Out of Order, 3, 31
Pastoral Care in a Market Economy, 33Patriarchy in the Jamaica Constabulary Force,
37Persistent Poverty, 33Philosophy in the West Indian Novel, 3, 31Plantation Jamaica, 13, 28Police and Crime Control in Jamaica, 41Political Calypso, The, 21Political Ecology of Bananas, 36Political Economy of Fertility in the British
West Indies, 28Politics of Labour and Development in
Trinidad, The, 41Port Royal, Jamaica, 28, 11Portuguese Jews of Jamaica, 28Postcolonialisms, 21Poverty, Empowerment and Social Development
in the Caribbean, 33Poverty and Perception in Jamaica, 33Practical Introduction to Econometric Methods,
A, 16, 33Psychonomics and Poverty, 33Public Sector Economics for Developing
Countries, 15, 33
Radical Theory, Caribbean Reality, 41Rastafari, 21Rebel Woman in the British West Indies during
Slavery, The, 28Reclaiming African Religions in Trinidad, 8, 22Recognizing and Controlling Nematode
Damage, 36Reinterpreting the Haitian Revolution, 4, 22Renewing Democracy in the Millennium, 41Research, 35Resource Sustainability and Caribbean
Development, 36Resources, Planning and Environmental
Management, 36Returning to the Source, 36, 42Rex Nettleford and His Works, 22Rock It Come Over, 22Rupert Gray, 32
Selected Issues and Problems in Social Policy, 42Self-Help Housing, the Poor, and the State in
the Caribbean, 33Shaping of the West Indian Church, 28
Shared Visions, 22Slave Population of the British Caribbean, 28Slave Population and Economy in Jamaica, 28Slave Society in the Danish West Indies, 28Slavery, Freedom and Gender, 28Slaves and Missionaries, 29Slaves Who Abolished Slavery, 29Small Farmers and the Protection of the
Watershed, 36Social Studies Curriculum and Methods for the
Caribbean, 35Solid Waste Management, 36Spirit of Dominance, A, 29Stabilization and Stagnation in the Jamaican
Economy, 34Steelband Movement, The, 22Stronger, Surer, Bolder, 7, 37Struggles of John Brown Russwurm, 6, 29Sugar and Slavery, 13, 29 Sugar and Slaves, 29Survival by Association, 34Surviving Small Size, 14, 41
Taxation and Equity in Jamaica, 39Theoretical and Empirical Exercises in
Econometrics, 16, 34They Do as They Please, 12, 29Time For Action, 29Tobago in Wartime, 10, 29Tourism Attractions, 34Tourism and Hospitality Education and
Training in the Caribbean, 34Towards Decolonisation, 25, 29Trailblazers in Nursing Education, 38Translation Manual for the Caribbean, A, 22Trinidad Yoruba, 22
Unappropriated People, The, 30Understanding Crime in Jamaica, 42Unprofitable Servants, 30
Walter Rodney, 42Warner Arundell, 32Waterfalls of Jamaica, The, 36West Indian Business History, 13, 30West Indies Accounts, 30When Me Was a Boy, 30White Rebel, 30Women in Grenadian History, 30Women in Jamaica, 38 Women and the Law, 38Women and the Sexual Division of Labour in
the Caribbean, 38Woodside, Pear Tree Grove P.O., 30Writing Rage, 9, 22
Ye Shall Dream, 8, 22Young Colonials, The, 30
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Catalogue design by Robert Harris Printed in the Jamaica by Phoenix Printery Ltd.