The Centre for Latin American and Caribbean Studies is delighted to announce the relaunch of its Caribbean Studies Seminar Series for the academic year 2021/22. These seminars will actively promote intellectual engagement and knowledge exchange by providing scholars - including postgraduate students and early career researchers - with the opportunity to present their interdisciplinary, comparative and integrated research on the Caribbean.
Papers for The People: The Radical Press of the late Colonial Caribbean
Speaker:Kesewa John (UCL Institute of the Americas)
Chair:Zakiya McKenzie (Exeter)
Much has been written about the Caribbean labour rebellions of the 1930s, the near constant series of uprisings which affected the whole region, which are widely considered to mark the birth of the contemporary Caribbean. Far less has been said about the popular newspapers which collectively, consciously and stridently critiqued the colonial status quo and were read by the masses who manifested those uprisings. Debating the new ideas of trade unionism, socialism, and Garveyism within their pages when publicly imagining more equitable futures for the Caribbean, ‘people papers’ formed a network of new entrants to the colonial public sphere, and a bold new voice for a majority-Black working class constituency long-ignored by the mainstream colonial press.
This paper introduces the concept and characteristics of people papers – locally-owned newspapers which self-defined as by the people for the people and positioned themselves in narrative opposition to the better-established, ‘planter papers’ in the 1930s and in so doing nurtured a crucial wave of Caribbean nationalism and a generation of nationalists.
Seminar Programme
12 October
16 November
7 December
Organisers: Eve Hayes de Kalaf (IMLR) and Jack Webb (Manchester)
The Caribbean Studies Seminar Series is organised by the Centre for Latin American and Caribbean Studies (CLACS) in collaboration with Race, Roots and Resistance (University of Manchester)
All are welcome to attend this free seminar, which will be held online via Zoom at 16:00 GMT. You will need to register in advance to receive the online joining link. Please click on the Book Now button below to register.
Download guidance on participating in an online event (pdf)