ACH 53rd Annual Conference PRE-CIRCULATED PAPERS:
Paper Access Instructions
To access papers – open the PDF – you will need the login and password provided upon conference registration. If you save the password in your browser you should only have to enter it once.
Some identified abstracts are freely available without a password.
Panel #1: “Cultural Resistance, Representation and Locations- Rethinking Caribbean Cultural Identities”
Gelien Matthews, The UWI, St Augustine Campus- “Freedom from Milner”
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Nicole Plummer, The UWI Mona Campus- “Forging Resilience: The Formation and Characteristics of Jamaican Plantation Business Culture amidst Crisis and Uncertainty, 1655-1730”
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Michelle McDonald, Stockton University, USA- “Free from the Stain of Slavery: The Cultural Representation of the Caribbean in the Free Produce Movement”
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Ale Pålsson, Uppsala University Sweden- “Bird’s Eye View: Investigating social dynamics through Geographic Information Systems and census data in the Swedish-Caribbean town Gustavia 1835–1872”
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Panel #2: “Age, Gender, Peace and Security- Reimagining Roots of Caribbean Adaptability”
Natália da Silva Perez, Recife-Amsterdam- “Barbados: An Enslaved Woman Traveling with the Burgos Household”
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Michael Becker, Bates College, USA- “Safety in Community: Fugitive Enslaved People in Nineteenth-Century Jamaica”
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Anne Ulentin, University of the Bahamas- “’She Has Not Been Seen or Heard of Since:’ Gender, Incarceration, and Punishment in The Bahamas, 1860s-1920s”
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Daniel Livesay, Claremont McKenna College, USA “Elderly Resilience in the Slave Trade to Jamaica”
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Panel #3: “Contested Indigeneity and Sovereignty in Post-Colonial Jamaica”
Erica Neeganagwedgin, Western University, Ontario “Taino Peoples Contemporary Voices and Self-determination”
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Mario Nesbitt, University of Cape Coast, “The Jamaican Maroons and Their Claims to Sovereignty”
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Lesley-Gail Atkinson, Edna Manley College of the Visual and Performing Arts, “Exploring the Concept of Indigeneity Within the Jamaican Context”
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Panel #4: “The Independence Project in the Caribbean”
José Andrés Fernández Montes de Oca, Universidad de Costa Rica – “Petitions, Agricultural Planning, and Development in Jamaica, 1895-1972”
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Henrice Altink, University of York, UK – “’No Water’: the unequal impact of drought in Jamaica in the 1990s”
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Aura S. Jirau Arroyo, Albion College, USA- “Flexibility and Resilience in the University of Puerto Rico, Río Piedras’ 1981 Student Strike”
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Panel #5: “Pan- Caribbean Approaches to Writing Caribbean History: Social Mobilisation in the Caribbean”
Rosa de Jong, University of Amsterdam- “Interned Europeans on a short retreat: Jewish refugees in Montego Bay”
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Shantel George, University of Glasgow- “African Work and the Eastern Caribbean Sea”
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Rocío Moreno Cabanillas, Universidad Pablo de Olavide de Sevilla, Spain- “The Mobilisation of Information in the Caribbean in the 18th century”
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Ángel Dámaso Luis León, University of La Laguna, Spain- “Cuban influence on the revolutionary left in Venezuela”
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Panel #6: “World Making in a Changing Caribbean: Resistance and Building Community in the Face of Imperialism and Crisis”
Traci-Ann Wint, Smith College, USA- “Resisting Malaise: Making and Unmaking Jamaican Tourism”
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Mónica A. Jiménez, University of Texas at Austin, USA- “Experimental Station: the US and the Remaking of Puerto Rico in the Early 20th Century”
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Nicole A. Burrowes, Rutgers University USA- “Up to our Eyes in Water and Mud’: Solidarity and the 1934 Floods in British Guiana”
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Jorell Meléndez-Badillo, Dartmouth College USA- “Transregional Migrations: Radical Infrastructures, Rationalist Pedagogies, and Anarchisms in Cuba, 1911-1912.”
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Panel #7: “Race and the Limits of Resilience: Emancipation Projects across Cuban Centuries”
Raquel Otheguy, Bronx Community College, USA – “Black Education and Cuban Freedom in the Nineteenth Century”
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Romy Sánchez, Université de Lille, France- “A Segregated Exile? Free People of Color’s within Cuba’s Separatist Exile Movement, 1830-1880”
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Anasa Hicks, Florida State University, USA- “The Color of Independence: Race and Combat in Cuba and Africa in the 1970s and 1980s”
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Panel #8: “Tourism and Identity Construction in Post-Colonial Jamaica”
Andrew Spencer, Mona School of Business and Management, UWI, “The Tourism Economy: From Plantocracy to Plutocracy”
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Susan Otuokon, Executive Director, Jamaica Conservation and Development Trust, “Preservation of Cultural and Natural Heritage through Sustainable Community Tourism – the Experience of the Blue and John Crow Mountains National Park and World Heritage Site”
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Oshane Robinson, Heritage Officer, TPDCo, “Heritage and Economics: Safeguarding the Heritage of Hanover through Heritage Tourism for Sustainable Development”
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