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ISBN: PB: 9781902669113

Signal Books

February 2017

288 pp.

21.6x14.8 cm

PB:
£19,99
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Colouring the Nation

Race and Ethnicity in the Dominican Republic

For sale in CIS only!

In few countries are concepts of race and colour as important or controversial as in the Dominican Republic. Sharing the Caribbean island of Hispaniola with Haiti, the country has coexisted uneasily with its predominantly African-descended neighbour since independence in the nineteenth-century. That independence and the country's national identity are rooted in the belief that the country is somehow different from and superior to Haiti. Race plays a key role in the construction of Dominican society and politics, as the official ideology defines the nation's characteristics as "white", European and Catholic. "Colouring the Nation" explores the significance of racial theorizing in Dominican society and its manifestations in everyday life. Drawing on extensive interviews in three contrasting neighbourhoods (a high-income Santo Domingo suburb, a poor barrio in the capital, and a rural community), David Howard examines how ideas of skin colour and racial identity influence a wide spectrum of Dominicans in how they view themselves and their Haitian neighbours. The book also considers the background to Dominican-Haitian relations, looking back to a turbulent colonial past and a recent history marked by dictatorship and violence. Surveying Dominican writing on race, both political and fictional, it presents a comprehensive picture of how attitudes are 'coloured' by proximity to Haiti and its alleged backwardness. "Colouring the Nation" explains how race has impacted on recent Dominican politics and obstructed the development of more positive relations between the Dominican Republic and Haiti. It outlines existing theories of race and ethnicity, exploring their applicability to the Dominican context and finally suggests that a popular concept of multiculturalism could provide a starting point for effective anti-racist policies in the Dominican Republic.

About the Author

David Howard is a Lecturer in Human Geography at the University of Edinburgh and has lived and worked in the Caribbean.