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Contribution to Book
Black, Mulatto and Light Skin: Reinterpreting Race, Ethnicity and Class in Caribbean Diasporic Communities
State of the Race: Creating Our 21st Century (2004)
  • Marc E. Prou, University of Massachusetts Boston
Abstract

In recent years, Caribbeanists of different academic specialization and intellectual orientation have demonstrated a renewed interest in the unholy trinity of race, class and ethnic matters. the renewed interest has reflected a continued, but rather an unsystematic attempt to account for the social characteristics of race, ethnicity, gender and class among Caribbean people, both at home and abroad. The current ethnic power relationships manisfested by the unequal distribution of wealth in Caribbean diasporic communities is the direct result of colonialist influence on race through exploitative practices of the plantocracy and selective immigration to create a Caribbean middle class.

Keywords
  • Race,
  • Ethnicity,
  • Caribbean
Publication Date
2004
Editor
J. Kamara & T. Vander Meer
Publisher
Diaspora Press
ISBN
0-9720149-0-X
Citation Information
Marc E. Prou. "Black, Mulatto and Light Skin: Reinterpreting Race, Ethnicity and Class in Caribbean Diasporic Communities" BostonState of the Race: Creating Our 21st Century (2004)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/marc_prou/5/