Family and Colour in JamaicaEyre & Spottiswoode, 1953 - 196 pages |
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Page 44
... complete revulsion against the standards , behaviour , and ideas of the dominant group . E. M. Forster in his novel A Passage to India , has illustrated the intense conflict in the soul of the Indian . But where much of the aboriginal ...
... complete revulsion against the standards , behaviour , and ideas of the dominant group . E. M. Forster in his novel A Passage to India , has illustrated the intense conflict in the soul of the Indian . But where much of the aboriginal ...
Page 160
... complete eunomia . Similarly , complete disnomia is difficult to conceive as such a state implies an entire lack of order in which a society could not exist . This being so it follows that in using such terms to describe a particular ...
... complete eunomia . Similarly , complete disnomia is difficult to conceive as such a state implies an entire lack of order in which a society could not exist . This being so it follows that in using such terms to describe a particular ...
Page 169
... complete assimilation of European cultural values is contained in ' colour ' itself . The physical fact of colour symbolizes to the individual that there can never be complete identification with the superior culture . That is a measure ...
... complete assimilation of European cultural values is contained in ' colour ' itself . The physical fact of colour symbolizes to the individual that there can never be complete identification with the superior culture . That is a measure ...
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Common terms and phrases
acceptance acres African American appears attitude banana become behaviour called cent century child Christian church colour complete concubinage dependent distinction domestic group economic European existence expression extremely fact factor fair farms father feeling figures function girl give given greater hair hand Herskovits household important Indian Indies individual island Jamaica labour land less living London lower class majority marriage married means middle class moral mother Negro never Obeah occur origin parents parish particular pattern peasant period person planters play population Port Portland position poverty practice problem produce regarded relatives result seen sense served sexual shows similar slavery slaves social society status structure sugar TABLE taken tend tion town union United upper upper class West whole wife woman women