Publication:

West Indies: Patterns of Development, Culture and Environmental Change Since 1492

    Full details

    Authors & editors

    Watts, David [Author]

    Publisher Cambridge University Press
    Year of publication 1987
    Languages

    Medium Book
    Edition1
    Topics

    Arts, culture and heritage > Social and economic history

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    Scope & contentPublisher

    This magisterial survey of the historical geography of the West Indies is at bottom concerned with the causes and consequences of three complex and inter-related phenomena: the rapid and total removal of a large aboriginal population; the development of plantation agriculture and the arrival of enforced labour, in the form of many thousands of African slaves; and the environmental, ecological and cultural changes that resulted.

    Dr Watts shows how the initial European vision of a land of plenty has been replaced by an awareness of the geographic and ecological fragiliaty of the area, and explains how the exploitative agricultural systems of the colonial and recent West Indies have not adjusted to the demands of the environment. An enormous array of historical, biological and literary sources are marshalled in support of Dr Watts' analysis, which is likely to remain the standard work on the subject for many years to come.

    Copies held

    Accession no. 230674

    • Shelf location: A065-WAT
    • Donor: Elizabeth Bartram