"Identities takes us where no man or woman has gone before in the discourse on society Barbados. This is both a conversation with and about Barbados; about its history, culture, strengths, weaknesses and prospects. Moving between the subjective and objective, the idiographic and nomethetic, these essays reveal a picture of Barbados from within and without, without being too pedantic or didactic." Ian Boxill, PhD, Senior Lecturer in Sociology University of the West Indies, Mona, Jamaica
"Identities takes us where no man or woman has gone before in the discourse on society Barbados. This is both a conversation with and about Barbados; ...
Identities takes us where no man or woman has gone before in the discourse on society Barbados. This is both a conversation with and about Barbados; about its history, culture, strengths, weaknesses and prospects. Moving between the subjective and objective, the idiographic and nomethetic, these essays reveal a picture of Barbados from within and without, without being too pedantic or didactic. Ian Boxill, PhD, Senior Lecturer in Sociology University of the West Indies, Mona, Jamaica
Identities takes us where no man or woman has gone before in the discourse on society Barbados. This is both a conversation with and about Barbados; a...
"The Caribbean in general and Barbados in particular, despite its illustrious scholarly achievements, is yet to develop an adequate intellectual infrastructure for archiving and documenting the quotidian dimensions of social and political life of the people of this region. Better Must Come, by Elombe Mottley, is an attempt to correct this situation with regard to Barbados, so that those who come after us might have a better sense of the legacies they inherit." Prof. Linden F. Lewis, Dept. of Sociology, Bucknell University, Lewisburg, Pennsylvania
"The Caribbean in general and Barbados in particular, despite its illustrious scholarly achievements, is yet to develop an adequate intellectual infra...
The Caribbean in general and Barbados in particular, despite its illustrious scholarly achievements, is yet to develop an adequate intellectual infrastructure for archiving and documenting the quotidian dimensions of social and political life of the people of this region. Better Must Come, by Elombe Mottley, is an attempt to correct this situation with regard to Barbados, so that those who come after us might have a better sense of the legacies they inherit." Prof. Linden F. Lewis, Dept. of Sociology, Bucknell University, Lewisburg, Pennsylvania
The Caribbean in general and Barbados in particular, despite its illustrious scholarly achievements, is yet to develop an adequate intellectual infras...