'Tiger in the stars' : the anatomy of Indian achievement in British Guiana, 1919-29
著者
書誌事項
'Tiger in the stars' : the anatomy of Indian achievement in British Guiana, 1919-29
(Warwick University Caribbean studies)
Macmillan, 1997
- : pbk
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. 375-392) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Concentrating on the decade after the end of indentureship in 1919, this book shows how the opportunity for Indian farmers to turn British Guiana into the rice-bowl of the Caribbean and to break the sugar monoculture was missed through planter opposition and governmental obstinacy. Nevertheless it was a period when an entrepenuerial and educated middle class emerged which was a key factor in the colony's future. The text is about possibilities. It celebrates the Indian Guyananese achievement and charts a histiography of hope in the Caribbean.
目次
- Introduction: history as autobiography?. Part 1 The Indian background and the adaption of indentured labourers in British Guiana: the origin of the Indians in British Guiana and some comparisons with the Indian immigrants in Fiji
- why did North Indians migrate?
- indentured women - dupes or rebels?
- Brahmanism and the adaption of Hindism in British Guiana
- the legacy of Ramayana. Part 2 Adaption resistance and survival in a harsh environment - Indians of the plantations, 1919-1929: the natural constraints of the coastal environment
- housing on the plantations - the obnoxious "logies"
- sanitation and health with special reference to malaria
- stagnant wages and the struggle for subsistence on the plantations
- labour and resistance on the plantations, 1919-1923
- the Ruimveldt killings of 1924. Part 3 Economic achievement in a hostile environment - Indians and the development of the rice industry, 1919-1929: land acquisition in the villages and the emergence of the rice industry, 1890s to 1918
- Governer Collett and the crippling of the rice industry, 1919-1922 - price control and the export embargo
- Collett, J.P. Santos and E.R.O. Robertson and the question of drainage and irrigation of the Corentyne Coast, 1920-1922
- the decline and recovery of the rice industry, 1923-1929
- cattle and exploitation of several niches in the village envronment. Part 4 The rise of an Indian middle class in British Guiana: the growth of Indian entreprenuership - rice, cattle and commerce
- Indian and official attitudes to education
- changing attitudes to education and the emergence of Indian professionals, with special reference to the work of the Canadian Mission
- creolized Indians and the shaping of an intellectual vision - the (Wesleyan) East Indian Young Men's Society
- Indians at play - cricket and Indian unity.
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