1st Edition

Routledge Handbook of Caribbean Studies

Edited By Patricia Noxolo, Kevon Rhiney, Ronald Cummings Copyright 2025
458 Pages 12 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

458 Pages 12 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

458 Pages 12 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

The Routledge Handbook of Caribbean Studies provides a critical collection of world-class scholarship about this fascinating, diverse and dynamic region. Bringing together new and established voices on the Anglophone, Francophone, Spanish-speaking and Dutch-speaking Caribbean, the handbook explores the cultural and historical shapes and reach of the region, as well as the environmental,... Read more

Introduction

Patricia Noxolo, Kevon Rhiney and Ronald Cummings

 

Section 1: (Dis)entanglements and Materiality in Environmental Studies

Section 1 Introduction

Kevon Rhiney (section editor)

 

Chapter 1: Caribbean Racial Ecologies: The Political Ecologies of Race, Nature, and Geography

Alex A. Moulton

 

Chapter 2: Caribbean Islands and the Coloniality of Climate Change: Navigating “the Anthropocene” through the historical legacies of the Plantation

Mimi Sheller

 

Chapter 3: Transformational Adaptation to Climate Change in the Caribbean 

Adelle Thomas

 

Chapter 4: Pedagogies of Survival: Research, Disaster and Repair in Dominica

Adom Philogene Heron and Schuyler K. Esprit

 

Chapter 5: Indigenous Vulnerability, Disaster Governance and Environmental Justice: Case Study of the 2021 La Soufrière Eruptions in St. Vincent and the Grenadines

Rose-Ann Smith

 

Chapter 6: Understanding Caribbean environmental worldviews as a form of environmental justice

April Baptiste

 

Chapter 7: Unmapping through Sound: The Caribbean as Method of Diaspora Wayfinding

Tao Leigh Goffe

 

Section 2: (Geo)politics

Section 2 Introduction

Patricia Noxolo (section editor)

 

Chapter 8: Puerto Rico and CARICOM: A Case Study in the History of Puerto Rico’s relations with the Caribbean

Raymond Laureano-Ortiz

 

Chapter 9: Colonial Continuities in Citizenship and the Role of Civil Society Organisations

Yonique Campbell

 

Chapter 10: Middle-class Caribbean identities: Gendering the Transnational and the Diasporic

Beverley Mullings

 

Chapter 11: Caribbean Migration and the Family: Women’s Transnational Agency

Natasha Kay Mortley

 

Chapter 12: Colourism in the Caribbean

Shirley Anne Tate

 

Chapter 13: Carceral masculinities in the Caribbean, with a focus on Belize, Guyana and Trinidad and Tobago

Dylan Kerrigan and Adam Baird

 

Chapter 14: Justice making and the performance of memory in the Francophone Caribbean

Fabienne Viala Manicom

 

Section 3: Histories and (Re)connections

Section 3 Introduction

Patricia Noxolo (section editor)

 

Chapter 15: Multi-ethnic nation building and branding in Suriname

Rosemarijn Hoefte

 

Chapter 16: ‘Singing the Lord’s Song in a Strange Land: Caribbean Spiritual Survival’

Janelle Rodriques

 

Chapter 17: ‘The Haytian situation’: Haiti in the Imagination of the nineteenth century Caribbean

Matthew J. Smith

 

Chapter 18: ‘Their Locomotive Habits’: Mobility and Post-Emancipation (Dis)Order in Port Cities

Anyaa Anim-Addo 

 

Chapter 19: Caribbean Studies, Queer Studies: Historical Intimates

Matthew Chin

 

Chapter 20: Sovereignty, Possession, Surrender: Caribbean Futures

Deborah A. Thomas

 

Chapter 21: Decolonial Caribbean Thought

Nelson Maldonado-Torres

 

Section 4: Literature and Culture

Section 4 Introduction

Ronald Cummings (section editor)

 

Chapter 22: The Making of The Bright Land: Federation and Filmmaking

Rachel Mosley-Wood

 

Chapter 23: Bloodcloth: Kinship and Fabric in Caribbean Literary Aesthetics

Faith Smith

 

Chapter 24: Afro-Caribbean and Latinx Archipelagic Connections: Boricuas in Hawai‘i

Yomaira C. Figueroa-Vásquez and Yolanda Martínez-San Miguel

 

Chapter 25: Caribbean Digital Diasporas

Tzarina T. Prater

 

Chapter 26: ‘I’m still in love with you boy’: Black Women, Sexual Politics and Lovers Rock Music’s Erotic Political Entanglements

Lisa Palmer

 

Chapter 27: The Sovereign Affects of Caribbean Women’s Poetics

Cornel Bogle

 

Chapter 28: ‘Sound Sistrens’: Listening to Female DJs in Contemporary Caribbean Fiction

Njelle W. Hamilton

 

Chapter 29: ‘The Repeating Island’: Visual Art, Black Ooze and the Postdiasporic Caribbean

Marsha Pearce

Biography

Patricia Noxolo’s research brings together the study of international culture and in/security, and uses postcolonial, discursive and literary approaches to explore the spatialities of a range of Caribbean and British cultural practices. She was awarded the 2021 Royal Geographical Society (RGS) Murchison Award and is a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences. Pat has led two international teams exploring Caribbean in/securities and creativity, and is a co-lead of University of Birmingham’s Stuart Hall Archive Project. She is a co-founder of the Fi Wi Road internships for Black Geography undergraduates. Pat is a committee member of the RACE group of the RGS, former chair of the Society for Caribbean Studies and former co-editor of Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers.

Kevon Rhiney is an Associate Professor in the Department of Geography at Rutgers University – New Brunswick. His research investigates the development and justice implications of global environmental change in the Caribbean, specifically the ways socio-ecological shocks (including impacts from extreme weather events, market volatilities and crop epidemics) are unevenly experienced and negotiated by historically marginalized communities.

Ronald Cummings is an Associate Professor of Black Studies and African Diaspora Literatures in the Department of English and Cultural Studies at McMaster University in Canada. He is the editor of several volumes including Caribbean Literatures in Transition 1970-2020 (co-edited with Alison Donnell). His co-edited volume Harriet’s Legacies: Race, Historical Memory and Futures in Canada received the award for best edited collection from the Canadian Studies Network (CSN) in 2023. Professor Cummings is also a Research Associate with the Centre for the Study of Race, Gender and Class (RGC) at the University of Johannesburg.