Equaliberty within the Dutch Caribbean: Methods of Being Non/Sovereign, edited by Francio Guadeloupe and Yvon van der Pijl, has been revealed within the Vital Caribbean Stduies collection of Bucknell College Press (April 15, 2022). With an epilogue by Anton Allahar and foreword by Linden Lewis, it consists of essays by Francio Guadeloupe, Yvon van der Pijl, Nikki Mulder, Jordi Halfman, Guiselle Starink-Martha, Rose Mary Allen, Lisenne Delgado, Francisca Grommé, Antonio Carmona Báez, Gregory Richardson, Charissa Granger, and Nicole Sanches.
Description: Equaliberty within the Dutch Caribbean is a group of essays that explores elementary questions of equality and freedom on the non-sovereign islands of the Dutch Caribbean. Drawing on in-depth ethnographic analysis, historic and media evaluation, the research of in style tradition, and autoethnographic accounts, the assorted contributions problem standard assumptions about political non/sovereignty. Whereas the ebook acknowledges the existence of nationalist independence actions, it opens a crucial house to take a look at different types of political articulation, autonomy, liberty, and an excellent life. Specializing in all six totally different islands and thru a large number of voices and tales, the quantity engages with the on a regular basis initiatives, extraordinary imaginaries, and desires of equaliberty alongside the work of independistas and conventional social actions aiming for extra or full self-determination. As such, it provides a wealthy and highly effective telling of the assorted methods of being in and belonging to our up to date postcolonial world.
YVON VAN DER PIJL is an affiliate professor of cultural anthropology at Utrecht College within the Netherlands. She co-edited the quantity Antropologische vergezichten: mondialisering, migratie en multiculturaliteit.
FRANCIO GUADELOUPE is an affiliate professor of anthropology of the College of Amsterdam and senior analysis fellow on the Royal Netherlands Institute for Southeast Asian and Caribbean Research (KITLV-KNAW), the Netherlands. He’s the creator of Chanting Down the New Jerusalem: Calypso, Christianity, and Capitalism within the Caribbean.
LINDEN LEWIS is a Presidential Professor of Sociology at Bucknell College. He’s the editor of Caribbean Sovereignty, Growth, and Democracy in an Age of Globalization and the co-editor of Shade, Hair and Bone: Race within the Twenty-first Century.
For extra info, see https://www.rutgersuniversitypress.org/bucknell/equaliberty-in-the-dutch-caribbean/9781978818668