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Rum Histories Jennifer Poulos Nesbitt

Rum Histories By Jennifer Poulos Nesbitt

Rum Histories by Jennifer Poulos Nesbitt


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Summary

Examines rum in anglophone Atlantic literature in the period of decolonization. This innovative study reveals rum's fascinating role in expressing the paradox of a postcolonial world still riddled with the legacies of colonialism.

Rum Histories Summary

Rum Histories: Drinking in Atlantic Literature and Culture by Jennifer Poulos Nesbitt

When you drink rum, you drink history. More than merely a popular spirit in the transatlantic, rum became a cultural symbol of the Caribbean. While rum is often dismissed as set dressing in texts about the region, the historical and moral associations of alcohol generallyand rum specificallycue powerful stereotypes, from touristic hedonism to social degeneracy.

Rum Histories examines the drink in anglophone Atlantic literature in the period of decolonization to complicate and elevate the symbolic currency of a commodity that in fact reflects the persistence of colonialism in shaping the material and mental lives of postcolonial subjects.

As a product of the plantation and as an intoxicant, rum was a central lubricant of the colonial economy as well as of cultural memory. Discussing a wide spectrum of writing, from popular contemporary works such as Christopher Moores Fluke and Joseph ONeills Netherland to classics by Michelle Cliff, V. S. Naipaul, and other luminaries of the Caribbean diaspora, Jennifer Nesbitt investigates how rums specific role in economic exploitation is muddled by moral attitudes about the consequences of drinking.

The centrality of alcohol use to racialized and gendered norms guides Nesbitts exploration of how the global commodities trade connects disparate populations across history and geography.

This innovative study reveals rums fascinating role in expressing the paradox of a postcolonial world still riddled with the legacies of colonialism.

Rum Histories Reviews

Fascinating and accessible, this important book situates rum as a potent economic, cultural, and specifically literary product in the Caribbean." - Supriya M. Nair, Tulane University, author of Pathologies of Paradise: Caribbean Detours

"This outstanding and engaging study uses the lens of rum to untangle the legacies of Caribbean colonialism and to challenge discourse that has demonized and eroticized the Caribbean region. Drawing on popular novels and historical scholarship, this theoretically sophisticated study is grounded in postcolonial studies, literary criticism, alcohol studies, and the anthropology of the Caribbean. Rum, according to Nesbitt, is simply "strange." However, a critical reading of rum histories offers Nesbitt a unique, and sometimes blurred, prism through which to confront colonial tropes and examine competing political dichotomies in the modern global community." - Frederick H. Smith, North Carolina A&T State University

About Jennifer Poulos Nesbitt

Jennifer Poulos Nesbitt is Associate Professor of English at Penn State York and author of Narrative Settlements: Geographies of British Womens Fiction between the Wars.

Additional information

NPB9780813946580
9780813946580
0813946581
Rum Histories: Drinking in Atlantic Literature and Culture by Jennifer Poulos Nesbitt
New
Hardback
University of Virginia Press
2022-03-30
232
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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