Further Reading
Title:
The Indigenous People of the Caribbean
Editor:
Samuel M. Wilson
Foreword by Jerald T. Milanich, Series Editor
All information on this book taken from the
University Press of Florida web site at:
http://www.upf.com/Spring1999/wilson.html
Description:
This volume brings together nineteen Caribbean specialists to produce
the first general introduction to the indigenous peoples of that region.
Writing for both general and academic audiences, contributors provide
an authoritative, up-to-date picture of these fascinating peoples--their
social organization, religion, language, lifeways, and contribution
to the culture of their modern descendants--in what is ultimately
a comprehensive reader on Caribbean archaeology, ethnohistory, and
ethnology.
Contents:
1. Introduction, Samuel M. Wilson
Part 1: Background to the Archaeology and Ethnohistory
of the Caribbean
2. The Study of Aboriginal Peoples: Multiple Ways of Knowing, Ricardo
Alegría
3. The Lesser Antilles Before Columbus, Louis Allaire
Part 2: The Encounter
4. The Biological Impacts of 1492, Richard L. Cunningham
5. The Salt River Site, St. Croix, at the Time of the Encounter, Birgit
Faber Morse
6. European Views of the Aboriginal Population, Alissandra
Cummins
Part 3: The First Migration of Village Farmers,
500 B.C. to A.D. 800
7. Settlement Strategies in the Early Ceramic Age, Jay B. Haviser
8. The Ceramics, Art, and Material Culture of the Early Ceramic Period
in the Caribbean Islands, Elizabeth Righter
9. Religious Beliefs of the Saladoid People, Miguel Rodríguez
10. Maritime Trade in the Prehistoric Eastern Caribbean, David R.
Watters
11. Notes on Ancient Caribbean Art and Mythology, Henry Petitjean
Roget
Part 4: The Taino of the Greater Antilles on the
Eve of Conquest
12. "No Man (or Woman) Is an Island": Elements of Taino
Social Organization, William F. Keegan
13. Taino, Island Carib, and Prehistoric Amerindian Economies in the
West Indies: Tropical Forest Adaptations to Island Environments, James
B. Petersen
14. The Material Culture of the Taino Indians, Ignacio Olazagasti
15. The Taino Cosmos, José R. Oliver
16. Some Observations on the Taino Language, Arnold R. Highfield
17. The Taino Vision: A Study in the Exchange of Misunderstanding,
Henry Petitjean Roget
Part 5: The Island Caribs of the Lesser Antilles
18. The Caribs of the Lesser Antilles, Louis Allaire
19. Language and Gender among the Kalinago of 15th Century St. Croix,
Vincent O. Cooper
Part 6: Indigenous Resistance and Survival
20. The Garifuna of Central America, Nancie L. Gonzalez
21. The Legacy of the Indigenous People of the Caribbean, Samuel M.
Wilson
22. Five Hundred Years of Indigenous Resistance, Garnette Joseph
About the Editor:
Samuel M. Wilson is associate professor of anthropology at
the University of Texas, Austin. He is author of Hispaniola: Caribbean
Chiefdoms in the Age of Columbus (1990), coeditor of Ethnohistory
and Archaeology: Approaches to Postcontact Change in the Americas
(1993), and a contributing editor and columnist for Natural History
magazine.
Reviews:
A survey of the current state of study of indigenous Caribbean
people by archaeologists, historians, and anthropologists. . . . Emphasizes
that even though indigenous people were the victims of genocide, they
helped to establish a persistent pattern of relations between other
Caribbean settlers and their environment, and became central symbols
of Caribbean identity and resistance to colonialism. . . . Strongly
recommended for every library concerned with Caribbean and Native
American studies.
--Choice
An ideal text or reader for a class on indigenous
peoples and cultures of the Caribbean. The volume provides a general
introduction to the prehistory, period of contact, and historical
changes that have transpired in the region.
--Latin American Antiquity
An excellent introduction to native peoples of
the Caribbean region. . . . Will be useful to anthropologists, historians,
and other social scientists working in the Caribbean.
--Jerald T. Milanich, Florida Museum of Natural History
Other Information:
1999. 266pp. 6 X 9.
19 b&w photographs, 3 line drawings, 2 tables, notes, works cited,
index.
ISBN 0-8130-1531-6
ISBN 0-8130-1692-4
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