This section contains 4,213 words (approx. 11 pages at 400 words per page) |
In the following essay, Japtok explores "the intertwining of the forces of nature with the forces of human-shaped time" present in "To Da-Duh, in Memoriam."
There might not be a region of the world that reflects the history of colonialism in its various phases in a more direct way than does the Caribbean. Its very population is a direct result of the African slave trade, European migration, and later immigration from various parts of mostly the British empire, while little is left of the indigenous Arawaks or Caribs. The Caribbean ecology has been forever changed by the plants, animals, and agricultural methods imposed by Europe; in addition, the soil depletion characteristic of a number of West Indian islands directly results from the monocultural economy of the plantation system. The multi-lingualism of the West Indies mirrors the various participants in and stages of European colonialismSpanish, Portuguese, Dutch...
This section contains 4,213 words (approx. 11 pages at 400 words per page) |