African American Research Center, Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Notes:
296 p, Social organisation and class : racial and cultural conflict in nineteenth century Trinidad / Bridget Brereton -- Notes on the evolution of inequality in Trinidad and Tobago / Ralph M. Henry -- "Race" and "colour" in pre-independence Trinidad and Tobago / Daniel A. Segal -- Spatial pattern and social interaction among Creoles and Indians in Trinidad and Tobago / Colin Clarke -- Ethnic conflict in Trinidad and Tobago : domination and reconciliation / Ralph Premdas -- Afro-Trinidadian identity and the Africanisation of the Orisha religion / James Houk -- What is "a Spanish"? : ambiguity and "mixed" ethnicity in Trinidad / Aisha Khan -- Structures of experience : gender, ethnicity, and class in the lives of two East Indian women / Patricia Mohammed -- An evaluation of the "creolisation" of Trinidad East Indian adolescent masculinity / Niels M. Sampath -- Ethnicity and social change in Trinidadian literature / Patrick Taylor -- Ethnicity and the contemporary calypso / Keith Q. Warner.
Yun examines a rare communal biography by an Afro-Chinese Cuban, Antonio Chuffat Latour. She maintains that his work is a valuable document of the Chinese experience in the Caribbean and argues for the inclusion of Africanity and blackness as part of a reconsideration of what constitutes a Caribbean Chinese identity.;
About the residents and conduct of life of the people living in "Little Havana or La Saguesera" at Bade County in Miami, Florida. It is a little community, which residents comprise mainly of Cubans. In the said community about 8,000 of businesses were owned by Cubans and five Bade County banks have Cuban presidents.
African American Research Center, Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Journal Title Details:
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Notes:
Semiannual (twice a year), A cross-disciplinary venue for quality research on ethnicity, race relations, and indigenous peoples. It is open to case studies, comparative analysis and theoretical contributions that reflect innovative and critical perspectives, focused on any country or countries in Latin America and the Caribbean, written by authors from anywhere in the world. In a context in which ethnic issues are becoming increasingly important throughout the region, we are seeing the rapid expansion of a considerable corpus of work on their social, political, and cultural implications.