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Culture and Social Structure in the Caribbean: Some Recent Work on Family and Kinship Studies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 June 2009

Raymond T. Smith
Affiliation:
University of the West Indies

Extract

The territories of the circum-Caribbean region contain some of the most complex societies in the world. Their complexity lies not in their size, degree of internal differentiation or technological development, but in the dependent and fragmented nature of their cultures, the ethnic diversity of their populations, the special nature of their dependent economies, the peculiarities of their political development and the apparent incoherence of their social institutions. It has been suggested that many Caribbean societies have no history of their own but should be viewed as an extension of Europe. Dr. Eric Williams, Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago, has recently written in reference to his country:

On August 31st 1962, a country will be free, a miniature state will be established, but a society and a nation will not have been formed.

Type
Kinship
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1963

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References

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47 W. Davenport, “The family system of Jamaica”, op. cit., p. 450.

48 See note 5.

49 Ibid.

50 One of the reasons why East Indians in British Guiana are reluctant to accept automatic registration of customary marriages is that it would then be difficult to dissolve the union if the couple prove to be incompatible.

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