Immigrant #99840 and Canecutter #7074: The Story Of An East Indian Family In Guyana 1905-2005 - Balkaran - Books - AuthorHouse - 9781425922221 - June 22, 2006
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Immigrant #99840 and Canecutter #7074: The Story Of An East Indian Family In Guyana 1905-2005

Balkaran

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$ 69.49

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Expected delivery Jul 29 - Aug 12
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Immigrant #99840 and Canecutter #7074: The Story Of An East Indian Family In Guyana 1905-2005

Immigrant # 99840 and Canecutter # 7074: The Story of an East Indian Family in Guyana is a most valuable document that fills a major gap in the writings which deal with the East Indian presence in Guyana. In focusing on an individual family's history and its network of relationships, Lal Balkaran throws light on those more inward experiences of the Indo-Guyanese absent from more general historical and social studies and which so far only fiction has hinted at. From the arrival of his foreparents as indentured immigrants from India in 1905, through to his family's departure to Canada in the 1980s, Lal Balkaran writes a personal and individual narrative, but one which will be full of resonances for other Guyanese. Balkaran's research into this "micro-level" aspect of history helps us to even better understand in general the historical evolution of the Guyanese nation, and that of Caribbean people of Indian ancestry in particular. Indeed, the author knows his subject well, and has made a more than useful contribution to the history of Indians in the Caribbean. This almost 230-page book contains a wealth of information organized around nine chapters with the issues and events categorized into sixty sub-headings. There are 41 photographs and copies of authentic immigration documents, a 141-word glossary, a 50-book bibliography, a profile of Guyana with unique statistics, and an 800-word index. Many Guyanese will reminisce over their own experiences which are so identifiable to those detailed in this wonderful book. It also provides a social history of the decades of the '60s, '70s, and '80s, and contains invaluable lessons on growing up and dealing with struggles, challenges, failures, and aspirations. With a setting on a sugar plantation, various aspects of village life, education, religion, culture, race, and Guyana's fierce politics are analyzed to show their impact on the family unit in a multiracial society amidst the scars of colonialism and also in an independent


196 pages, colour illustrations

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released June 22, 2006
ISBN13 9781425922221
Publishers AuthorHouse
Pages 196
Dimensions 219 × 280 × 15 mm   ·   644 g
Language English