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Journal ArticleDOI

Toward a Definition of Caribbean American Regionalism: Contesting Anglo-America's Caribbean Designs in Mary Seacole and Sui Sin Far

Sean X. Goudie
- 01 Jun 2008 - 
- Vol. 80, Iss: 2, pp 293-322
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TLDR
The role of women's voices in such a regionalist, Caribbean American imaginary, specifically Jamaican Creole healer and boarding-house operator Mary Seacole and the Eurasian writer Sui Sin Far, is discussed in this article.
Abstract
This essay brings into dialogue discrete conversations in Caribbean studies, international political economy (IPE), and hemispheric American studies. Contextualizing these fields through the trope of hospitality, a figure of particular significance in Caribbean-U.S. relations, the author charts a field of writing he terms Caribbean American Regionalism, which is not bound necessarily to the geographic or ideological commitments of U.S. regionalist traditions even as it acknowledges and extends from innovative scholarship about them. The essay focuses on the role of women's voices in such a regionalist, Caribbean American imaginary, specifically Jamaican Creole healer and boarding-house operator Mary Seacole and the Eurasian writer Sui Sin Far. Although from distinct epochs and locations, Seacole and Sui Sin Far-as migrant laboring women of color in the Caribbean American region-are affected by, and their texts keenly respond to, developments in Caribbean-U.S. relations during the last half of the nineteenth century. This is particularly so in light of the dependence of corporations like the Panama Railroad Company and United Fruit Company on commodities produced by, and on the commodifying the bodies of, laboring West Indian women in hospitality industries. Seacole and Sui Sin Far, by marking (in)hospitable relations in the Caribbean American region in sites of hospitality where they reside and work-the Jamaican creole boarding-house and tourist hotel, respectively-expose the (in)hospitality of industry and the industry of (in)hospitality sponsoring nineteenth-century U. S. expansionism.

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Dissertation

Racial Hybridity and Victorian Nationalism: 1850-1901

TL;DR: This article examined the relationship between fiction and scientific ideologies of race mixing and found that the burgeoning Victorian science of racialism, which was obsessed with ideas of racial hybridity, was allied closely to theories of British national identity in the nineteenth century.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Terminal: Eric Walrond, the City of Colón, and the Caribbean of the Panama Canal

TL;DR: Matter in the wrong place: five words waiting for the largest public works project in US history was coined by geographer Vaughan Cornish, who added a particularly memorable superlative to the many used to describe the American Panama Canal as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Creolizing the White Woman's Burden: Mary Seacole Playing "Mother" at the Colonial Crossroads between Panama and Crimea

Tan-Feng Chang
- 01 Jan 2017 - 
TL;DR: The authors examines how the creolized formations of race, gender, and empire in Mary Seacole's 1857 memoir, Wonderful Adventures of Mrs. Seacoles in Many Lands, challenge Victorian discourses on motherhood and racial purity.
Journal ArticleDOI

His master's voice? A hemispheric history of phonographic fictions

TL;DR: The authors explored the relationship between writing and sound recording technologies by constructing a genealogy of "phonographic fictions" connecting Spanish America to the United States and found that the emergence of the recording industry and other inscriptive technologies was fueled first by the Spanish American War and then by the United Fruit Company's creation of banana export enclaves in Central America and the Caribbean.
Journal ArticleDOI

"The Right Woman in the Right Place": Mary Seacole and Corrective Histories of Empire

TL;DR: The authors traces the "corrective histories" deployed to re-order Seacole's narrative into more contemporary political frameworks of anti-racism, multiculturalism, and humanitarianism and suggests an interpretive methodology that conceptually allows for and indeed centers on the complex experiences of black women in the diaspora.