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Centring the Periphery

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Patrick Baker's post-modern approach uses ideas from chaos theory and world systems theory to interpret the prehistory and history of Dominica. During its prehistory Dominica served as an occasiona...
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  • 01 March 1994
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Patrick Baker's post-modern approach uses ideas from chaos theory and world systems theory to interpret the prehistory and history of Dominica. During its prehistory Dominica served as an occasional stepping-stone for small-scale, independent foraging and horticultural peoples migrating up the Antillean arc to the larger islands in the north. Its discovery by Europeans brought it into a social and economic constellation that was constructed and orchestrated largely from the metropolitan centre. Centring the Periphery is the unfolding story of the struggle of the Dominican people to create and order a world that is controlled from outside.

The concept of "centring" is used to mean "ordering the world," and Baker links this to ideas in chaos theory, which views order and disorder as mutually generative phenomena rather than static antinomies. Thus strategies to control disorder and create and maintain order may suddenly precipitate change. Baker's application of these theories to an island nation that has received little detailed attention in the past makes this a highly original work, as does his holistic, post-modern perspective.

In addition to presenting a sensitive historical analysis, he confronts the dilemma of meaning in peripheral situations and the experience of dependency in the world system. Centring the Periphery is germane to understanding the majority of the world's people and makes a significant contribution to the study of society in developing nations.

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Price: $125.00
Pages: 280
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Imprint: McGill-Queen's University Press
Publication Date: 01 March 1994
ISBN: 9780773511347
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Process / General, HISTORY / Caribbean & West Indies / General
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"This study makes a significant contribution to scholarship in the field of Caribbean studies. The work is important in that it provides a carefully constructed general historical account of a tiny island society, which rarely captures the imagination of First World academicians." Abigail Bakan, Department of Political Studies, Queen's University.