Aufsatz(elektronisch)1. Juli 2020

Disrepair, Distress, and Dispossession

In: Small axe: a journal of criticism, Band 24, Heft 2, S. 133-146

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Abstract

The crisis unleashed in Barbuda by Hurricane Irma in 2017 followed centuries of neglect by the British colonial state and then by the postcolonial government of its sister island, Antigua. Barbuda developed customary communal-land tenure as a result of its peculiarities in slavery and freedom, and this survival strategy has doubled as political and economic resistance to encroachment by Antigua, where private land ownership and uneven opportunity abound because of the unstable, cyclical nature of its main industry—tourism. Although Barbudans have long delimited tourism development and refused private land ownership, citing communal land as their shield, these issues have resurfaced in the rebuilding process after Hurricane Irma. Barbudans' desires to maintain their previous way of life remain hampered by the Antiguan government's disaster capitalist desires to reconstruct Barbuda as a resort paradise. This essay reveals how climate change, economic fragility, and uncertain sovereignty have collectively undermined Barbuda's customary forms of independence, leaving dispossession in their wake.

Sprachen

Englisch

Verlag

Duke University Press

ISSN: 1534-6714

DOI

10.1215/07990537-8604550

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