Changing Continuities and the Scholar-Activist Anthropology of Constance R. Sutton

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Connie Sutton was a pioneer of Caribbeanist anthropology and a political and social activist who advocated for racial and gender justice internationally.

By: David Sutton and Deborah A. Thomas

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Description

Connie R. Sutton was a pioneer of Caribbeanist anthropology and a political and social activist who advocated for racial and gender justice internationally. Her scholarship raised broad questions about positionality in colonial studies and challenged male-centric authorial voice in “writing culture” more generally. She was committed to collaboration and collectivity, and to highlighting the scholarship of working-class people, women, people of colour, Caribbean and Latin American scholars, and early students of transnational migration – perspectives that have often been ignored and erased within mainstream anthropology.

In Changing Continuities, 14 of Sutton’s essays are reproduced across the broad themes of Caribbeanist Anthropology, Feminism and Black Women’s Power, and Transnationalism, which also include some 12 reflections by scholars who highlight the essays’ significance to their own work and to the field as a whole.

Additional information

Weight 2 lbs
Dimensions 9 × 6 in
ISBN

978-976-8286-60-4

Binding

Paperback

Page Count

426 pages

Publication Date

October 2022

About Author

DAVID SUTTON is a professor of anthropology at Southern Illinois University. While his ‘research’ began at age five with his mother in Barbados, it has since focused on the Greek island of Kalymnos, on topics of memory, food, and cooking.

DEBORAH THOMAS is the R. Jean Brownlee professor of anthropology, and the director of the Center for Experimental Ethnography at the University of Pennsylvania. She is a prize-winning author and filmmaker and publishes on violence and the afterlives of imperialism in Jamaica.

Contents

Preface: Constance Sutton’s Anthropology: From Social Movements to

Transnationalism – A Life in Scholarship and Activism – Deborah A. Thomas and David Sutton

Acknowledgements

Praisesongs for Constance Sutton: An Introduction – Antonio Lauria

 

Section One: Caribbeanist Anthropology, Labour, and Kinship

  1. From Area Studies to Localized Transnationalism: Notes on Connie Sutton’s Caribbean Journey

Jorge L. Giovannetti-Torres

  1. The Scene of the Action: Envisioning Political Futures

Deborah A. Thomas

  1. Revisiting Caribbean Labour: The Challenges of Connie’s Legacy

Jean Stubbs

  1. Field Notes on a Visit to Barbados: An Approach to Constance Sutton’s Afro-Caribbean Family Theory

Ana Vera Estrada

  1. Connie Sutton’s Final Reflections on the Cultural Life of Barbados

Linden F. Lewis

 

Sutton Essays:

  1. Continuing the Fight for Economic Justice: The Barbados Sugar Workers’ 1958 Wildcat Strike
  2. Public Monuments in Post-Colonial Barbados: Sites of Memory, Sites of Contestation
  3. African-Caribbean Family and Kinship: Changing Themes and Perspectives

 

Section Two: Feminism and Black Women’s Power

  1. Women, Knowledge, and Power: Revisiting Connie Sutton’s Early Feminist Work

Susan Makiesky-Barrow

  1. Crab Antics: Challenging the Reputation-Respectability Matrix in Caribbean Anthropology

Rhoda Reddock

  1. From NYWAC to IWAC to Nairobi and Beyond: A Personal Reflection on Connie Sutton and the International Women’s Movement

Linda Basch

  1. Changing Continuities: Reflections on the Powers of Motherhood and Sonhood

David Sutton

 

Sutton Essays:

  1. Women, Knowledge, and Power

Constance Sutton, Susan Makiesky, Daisy Dwyer, and Laura Klein

  1. Social Inequality and Sexual Status in Barbados

Constance Sutton and Susan Makiesky-Barrow

  1. Cultural Duality in the Caribbean
  1. The Power to Define: Women, Culture, and Consciousness
  2. From City-States to Post-Colonial Nation-State: Yoruba Women’s Changing Military Roles
  1. Motherhood Is Powerful: Embodied Knowledge from Evolving Field-Based Experiences

 

Section Three: Transnationalism

  1. Bi-Directions and New Directions in Migration Research: Theorizing Dispossession and Power from Connie Sutton’s Work on Transnational Migration

Nina Glick Schiller

  1. Transforming Migration: An Andean Perspective on the Work of Constance Sutton

William P. Mitchell

  1. Centring Connection: Intra-Caribbean Migration and Beyond

Andrea Queeley

 

Sutton Essays:

  1. Migration and West Indian Racial and Ethnic Consciousness

Constance Sutton and Susan Makiesky-Barrow

  1. The Caribbeanization of New York City and the Emergence of a Transnational Sociocultural System
  2. Some Thoughts on Gendering and Internationalizing Our Thinking about Transnational Migrations
  1. Circum-Caribbean Migrations: Spinning New Webs of Connection Between Barbados and Cuba
  2. Celebrating Ourselves: The Family Reunion Rituals of African-Caribbean Transnational Families

 

Afterword

Donald Robotham

Testimonials

Contributors

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