An Unformed Map : Geographies of Belonging between Africa and the Caribbean

An Unformed Map : Geographies of Belonging between Africa and the Caribbean

An Unformed Map : Geographies of Belonging between Africa and the Caribbean

Cheapest Total Price
2 - 4 working days
Visa Visa Mastercard Mastercard
£82.80
Free Delivery

An Unformed Map: Geographies of Belonging between Africa and the Caribbean (Theory in Forms)

This title will be released on June 3, 2025. Pre-order now. Express Delivery available with Amazon Prime.
Direct debit Direct debit Visa Visa Mastercard Mastercard
£84.19
Free Delivery

An Unformed Map : Geographies of Belonging between Africa and the Caribbean - Details

▶ Finding you the best price!

We have found 2 prices for An Unformed Map : Geographies of Belonging between Africa and the Caribbean. Our price list is completely transparent with the cheapest listed first. Additional delivery costs may apply.

An Unformed Map : Geographies of Belonging between Africa and the Caribbean - Price Information

  • Cheapest price: £82.80
  • The cheapest price is offered by Whsmith.co.uk . You can order the product there.
  • The price range for the product An Unformed Map : Geographies of Belonging between Africa and the Caribbean is €£82.80to €£84.19 with a total of 2 offers.
  • Payment methods: The online shop Whsmith.co.uk supports: Visa, Mastercard
  • Delivery: The shortest delivery time is 2 - 4 working days working days offered by Whsmith.co.uk .
An Unformed Map : Geographies of Belonging between Africa and the Caribbean

Cheapest offer

In An Unformed Map, Philip Janzen traces the intellectual trajectories of Caribbean people who joined the British and French colonial administrations in Africa between 1890 and 1930.Caribbean administrators grew up in colonial societies, saw themselves as British and French, and tended to look down on Africans.Once in Africa, however, they were doubly marginalized-excluded by Europeans and unwelcome among Africans.This marginalization was then reproduced in colonial archives, where their lives appear only in fragments.Drawing on sources beyond the archives of empire, from dictionaries and language exams to a suitcase full of poems, Janzen considers how Caribbean administrators reckoned with the profound effects of assimilation, racism, and dislocation.As they learned African languages, formed relationships with African intellectuals, and engaged with African cultures and histories, they began to rethink their positions in the British and French empires.They also created new geographies
£82.80
2 - 4 working days
Whsmith.co.uk
Don't forget your voucher code: