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11 - A Caribbean Context for the World-System: A Case Study in 17th-and 18th-Century Economic and Social Interdependency

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 March 2021

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Summary

SUMMARY: Agro-industrialism in the Caribbean was a driving force in the Atlantic economy during the 17th and 18th centuries. As an institution, the sugar colonies had a far-reaching impact on the emerging world-system out of proportion to their size. Colonial landscapes from this period can be construed as landscapes of capitalism and reveal the intricate web of influences peripheral regions wielded over social and political life in the core state. Archaeological evidence from Nevis is presented to illustrate how tropical slave-based agro-industrialism propelled the evolution of capitalism. Technological and economic interdependency will be examined from an anthropological perspective fusing landscapes with material culture.

INTRODUCTION

… thus the land and labour [sic] of the country being devoted to cultivation of the sugar cane, the corn and provisions they raise are merely accidental… to the sugar cane everything is sacrificed as a trifle to the major object.

Broad historical patterns are often most visible, and frequently most active, in peripheries of social systems, which suggests that investigating cases of development in peripheries can lead to a more nuanced understanding of the forces structuring social systems. Caribbean frontiers are historic peripheries of the European economic and political sphere yet served as crucibles for processes stimulating the evolution of European expansion and political/economic domination in the New World. From c. 1600 through the mid 1800s the Caribbean was a microcosm of the socio-political transformations gripping competing imperial powers and the emerging global market. The islands were the scenes of capitalist and agro-industrial experimentation – critical arenas wherein the social relations of the modern world were forged. At the center of this tumultuous and momentous historical development was the colony of Nevis.

Archaeological research on this small yet surprisingly influential colony casts light on social dynamics in the periphery during the period of inchoate capitalism and nascent globalization. The internalization of capitalist consumer ideology can also be interpreted from archaeological remains of material culture, architecture, and use of space. The processes of socio-economic development playing out on Nevis, and subsequent landscape evolution, did so, not merely against the backdrop of capitalism's ascendancy but integrated and in resonance with its rise to dominance, perhaps contributing fundamentally to its ascendance.

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Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2021

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