Caribbean Reasonings

$24.95

Freedom, Power and Sovereignty  – The Thought of Gordon K. Lewis

By: Brian Meeks and Jermaine McCalpin

Ian Randle Publishers Bools on Amazon Kindle

Description

For seven consecutive years, the Centre for Caribbean Thought at the University of the West Indies, Mona hosted a series of ‘Caribbean Reasonings’ – conferences honouring outstanding Caribbean intellectuals. The G.K. Lewis conference was the final in the series; and though Lewis was neither a Caribbean man by birth nor heritage, he was so by choice and was without a doubt, a leading voice in Caribbean political science.

From his arrival in Puerto Rico in the 1950s, until his death in the early 1990s, Lewis, through his numerous publications, established himself as a Caribbean thinker. In this volume, the contributors pay homage to Lewis’s remarkable work embodied in his four most influential publications on the Caribbean  – Puerto Rico: Freedom and Power in the Caribbean, The Growth of the Modern West Indies, Main Currents in Caribbean Thought and Grenada: The Jewel Despoiled.

The breadth of Lewis’s scholarship is revealed in the ten chapters covering his work on the Caribbean. From concepts of sovereignty and regional integration, to the nature of democracy in the contemporary Caribbean, the influence of African thought and the African Diaspora on the development of a Caribbean intellectual tradition, the influence of theology and the pursuit of a democratic socialism for the Caribbean, G.K. Lewis’s work is analysed, admired and critiqued by the contributors.

Additional information

Weight 1 lbs
Dimensions 9 × 6 in
ISBN

978-976-637-863-9

Binding

Paperback

Page Count

235

Publication Date

May 2015

About the Editors

Brian Meeks was Professor of Social and Political Change at the University of the West Indies, Mona and Director of the Sir Arthur Lewis Institute for Social and Economic Studies.

Jermaine McCalpin is a Lecturer in Transitional Justice in the Department of Government, University of the West Indies, Mona. He specializes in Africana political philosophy, Caribbean political thought, and transitional justice.

Contents

IntroductionThe Scholar as OptimistBrian Meeks

PART 1

In the Vanguard of Caribbean Thought

  1. Deciphering the Marx-Burke Counterpoint in Gordon K. Lewis’s Work – Anthony P. Maingot
  2. Gordon Lewis and the Writing of Afro-Caribbean Political ThoughtPaget Henry
  3. ‘An Extended Debate with Europe?’: G.K. Lewis, Denis Benn, Paget Henry, and the Epistemological Challenge in the Writing of Caribbean Political Thought – Tennyson S.D. Joseph
  4. A Lens of a Different Colour: Gordon K. Lewis, Postmodernity and Cuban Antislavery NarrativesClaudette M. Williams
  5. Opening the Canon: The Place of Theology in Caribbean Intellectual ThoughtDelroy A. Reid-Salmon
  6. Toward Reconstituting Caribbean Identity Discourse from within the Dutch Caribbean Island of CuraçaoRose Mary Allen

PART 2

Rethinking Caribbean Politics

  1. The ‘Slums of Empire’ and Gordon K. Lewis: Reflections on Decolonization and Sovereignty in the CaribbeanJessica Byron
  2. Some Perspectives on Gordon Lewis’s Legacy in the Understanding of Regionalism Edward Greene
  3. The Reshaping of Freedom and Power in Puerto Rico: Community-based Social Change in the Era of Neoliberal ReformsRafael A. Boglio Martínez
  4. Gordon Lewis and the Mass Suicide in Jonestown, Guyana 1978Ralph Premdas
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