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Centring the periphery : chaos, order, and the ethnohistory of Dominica / Patrick L. Baker.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Montreal ; Buffalo : McGill-Queen's University Press, (c)1994.Description: 1 online resource (xx, 251 pages) : illustrationsContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780773564398
Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • F2051 .C468 1994
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
Contents:
2. Indigenous Peoples and Their Contact Experience -- 3. European Discovery and Settlement -- 4. Formal Colonization: British Annexation, French Conquest, and Slave Revolts -- 5. Slavery and Emancipation -- 6. A Dominican Peasantry -- 7. The Rise of the Mulatto Elite -- 8. Capitalizing a Subsistence Economy -- 9. Democracy: Bringing Decision Making Home -- 10. Four Hundred and Eighty-Five Years Later: Independence?
Summary: The concept of "centring" is used to mean "ordering the world," and Baker links this to ideas in chaos theory, which views order and disorder as mutually generative phenomena rather than static antinomies. Thus strategies to control disorder and create and maintain order may suddenly precipitate change. Baker's application of these theories to an island nation that has received little detailed attention in the past makes this a highly original work, as does his holistic, post-modern perspective. In addition to presenting a sensitive historical analysis, he confronts the dilemma of meaning in peripheral situations and the experience of dependency in the world system. Centring the Periphery is germane to understanding the majority of the world's people and makes a significant contribution to the study of society in developing nations.
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Includes bibliographies and index.

The concept of "centring" is used to mean "ordering the world," and Baker links this to ideas in chaos theory, which views order and disorder as mutually generative phenomena rather than static antinomies. Thus strategies to control disorder and create and maintain order may suddenly precipitate change. Baker's application of these theories to an island nation that has received little detailed attention in the past makes this a highly original work, as does his holistic, post-modern perspective. In addition to presenting a sensitive historical analysis, he confronts the dilemma of meaning in peripheral situations and the experience of dependency in the world system. Centring the Periphery is germane to understanding the majority of the world's people and makes a significant contribution to the study of society in developing nations.

1. Theoretical Questions -- 2. Indigenous Peoples and Their Contact Experience -- 3. European Discovery and Settlement -- 4. Formal Colonization: British Annexation, French Conquest, and Slave Revolts -- 5. Slavery and Emancipation -- 6. A Dominican Peasantry -- 7. The Rise of the Mulatto Elite -- 8. Capitalizing a Subsistence Economy -- 9. Democracy: Bringing Decision Making Home -- 10. Four Hundred and Eighty-Five Years Later: Independence?

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