Article
A group of islands off the southeast coast of North America, due east of Central America, and due north of South America. Located in the Caribbean Sea, these islands are geographically considered part of North America. The name Caribbean refers to the Caribs, the original inhabitants of the islands, who were wiped out by genocidal practices that paved the way for the first iterations of sugarcane slavery plantations, which began as early as the 1500s. Today, the islands of the Caribbean represent one of the richest cultural diasporas to emerge from colonial subjugation.
"Lagoon" by Dick Pountain is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA.
Manuscripts
References
Encyclopedia Britannica Online
N.d. Carib. http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/95780/Carib, accssed October
21, 2014.
Henke, Holder and Fred Reno
2003 Modern Political Culture in the Caribbean. Kingston, Jamiaca: University of the West
Indies Press.
Li-Chun, Hsiao
2009 This Shipwreck of Fragments: Historical Memory, Imaginary Identities, and
Postcolonial Geography in Caribbean Culture and Literature. Newcastle: Cambridge
Scholars.
Rogoziński, Jan
1999 A Brief History of the Caribbean: From the Arawak and the Carib to the Present. New
York: Facts On File.