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From the Banana Zones to the Big Easy focuses on the immigration of West Indians and Central Americans--particularly those of British West Indian descent from the Caribbean coastal areas--to New Orleans from the turn of the twentieth century to the start of World War II. Glenn A. Chambers discerns the methods by which these individuals of diverse racial and ethnic backgrounds integrated into New Orleans society and negotiated their distinct historical and ethnoracial identities in the Jim Crow South. Throughout this study, Chambers explores two central questions: What did it mean to be "West Indian" within a context in which the persons migrating--or their parents, in some cases--were not born in the West Indies? And how did Central Americans grapple with this "West Indian" cultural identity when their political identity (citizenship) was Honduran, Costa Rican, or Panamanian? Chambers maintains that a distinct West Indian culture did not emerge in New Orleans. Rather, newly arrived West Indian practices intertwined with existing African American traditions, a process intensified in New Orleans's established climate of incorporating, and often absorbing, new peoples and cultures.
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