Abstract
In geopolitical terms, the Caribbean since 1492 has been an appendage on the periphery of the Western world powers, first those of Europe and more recently of the United States. It was the Europeans who explored, mapped, colonised and Balkanised the Caribbean, exterminating the Amerindian populations, and who in the seventeenth century, created de novo societies, the sole objective of which was the production of sugar on slave-worked plantations. While seventeenth- and eighteenth-century annexations by the British, French, Dutch and Danish transformed Columbus’ ‘Spanish lake’ into a colonial version of the map of Europe, European hegemony was eroded by the French Revolution and the Haitian wars of independence.
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Notes
Manuel Moreno Fraginals, Frank Moya Pons, and Stanley L. Engerman (eds), Between Slavery and Free Labour: the Spanish-speaking Caribbean in the Nineteenth Century (Baltimore and London: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1985).
Richard Millett, ‘Imperialism, Intervention and Exploitation: the Historical Context of International Relations in the Caribbean’ in Richard Millett and W. Marvin Will (eds), The Restless Caribbean: Changing Patterns of International Relations (New York: Praeger, 1979) pp. 3–18.
Eric E. Williams, Capitalism and Slavery (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1944).
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W. Arthur Lewis, The Agony of the Eight. (Barbados: Advocate Printery,1965).
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Albert L. Gastmann, ‘ContinentalEurope and the Caribbean: the French and Dutch Experience’, in Millett and Will (eds), The Restless Caribbean,pp. 219–33.
Harry Hoetink, ‘The Dutch Caribbean and its Metropolis’, in Emanuel de Kadt (ed.), Patterns of Foreign Influence in the Caribbean (London: Oxford University Press for the Royal Institute of International Affairs, 1972) pp. 103–20.
Gastmann, ‘Continental Europe and the Caribbean’.
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House of Commons, Caribbean and Central America, Fifth Report from the Foreien Affairs Committee. Session 1981–2 (London: HMSO. 1982).
Ibid., p. liii.
Ibid., p. lii.
Ibid., p. liv.
Ibid., p. lxiii.
Ibid., p. lvii.
Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Observations on Caribbean and Central America (London, HMSO, 1983) Cmnd. 8819.
Anthony Payne, International Crisis in the Caribbean (London and Canberra: Croom Helm, 1984) pp. 90–2.
House of Commons. Caribbean and Central America. o. xlvii.
Ibid., D. xlviii.
Payne, International Crisis in the Caribbean. p. 104.
Jean Benoist, ‘Les iles creoles: Martinique, Guadeloupe, Reunion, Maurice’, Ces îles où l’on parl français, Herodote, nos 37–8 (1985) pp. 53–75.
Guy Lasserre and Albert Mabileau, ‘The French Antilles and their Status as Overseas Departments’, in de Kadt (ed.), Patterns of Foreign Influence, pp. 82–102.
Gastmann, ‘Continental Europe and the Caribbean’. p. 224.
Payne, International Crisis in the Caribbean, p. 104.
Government of the Netherlands, ‘Conference’.
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© 1990 Anthony T. Bryan, J. Edward Greene and Timothy M. Shaw
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Clarke, C. (1990). Europe in the Caribbean: from Colonial Hegemony to Geopolitical Marginality. In: Bryan, A.T., Greene, J.E., Shaw, T.M. (eds) Peace, Development and Security in the Caribbean. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-10244-0_6
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-10244-0_6
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