ABSTRACT

This book, first published in 1984, recounts the daily life, the politics, religion and leisure pursuits of Jamaicans in working- and middle-class Kingston. The study is based upon the author’s observations of life in Selton Town and Vermount, two neighborhoods of Kingston, between 1971 and 1982. The author analyses the local social conflicts and ideologies, thereby, demonstrating how larger issues of class domination and cultural hegemony pervade neighbourhood life. The study provides a detailed contextual account of the significance of belonging to different classes. It provides a different perspective of Caribbean anthropology combining the techniques of ethnography and political economy.

chapter I|245 pages

Class, Politics and Education in Jamaica

chapter III|18 pages

Life in Selton Town

chapter IV|19 pages

Life in Vermount

chapter V|19 pages

Politics and Power in The Neighborhood

chapter VI|149 pages

Religion in the Neighborhood

chapter VII|12 pages

Sport and Leisure in the Neighborhood

chapter VIII|120 pages

Conflict and Dispute in Selton Town and Vermount

chapter X|19 pages

Case Studies: The Middle Class Position

chapter XI|25 pages

Case Studies: The Working Class Position

chapter XII|42 pages

Conclusion