Abstract

Wake up early one mornin’ Kiss my Mamma goodbye Goin’ back ta di Islan’ I say, don’ worry Mamma, don’ cry Ronnie Butler and the Ramblers “Crown Calypso” We are who we are Children of the hot lands We build fires every Christmas And pray in earnest for cold weather Jerome Cartwright, “Cold Snap” I told of never coming Winter; The boats dancing gaily in a blue bay; Then I sang of flowers blooming, the wild ocean booming, Thunder walking the streets of the islands in May Robert Elliot Johnson, “The Wanderer” These three extracts provide an introduction to our subject: the factors affecting the representation of the Bahamian landscape in art. Together they seem to triangulate the subject. The lyrics from a song performed by one of our most celebrated calypsonians, Ronnie Butler, explore the irrepressible nostalgia for a simpler rural past that permeates much of Bahamian secular music. The second, a poem, addresses our sense of alienation from our island landscape as a result of the North Atlantic’s cultural colonialism. And the last poem demonstrated the extent to which Bahamians speak in the language of the tourist brochure when describing their country to outsiders. Migration, memory and the marketplace do not exhaust the list of factors shaping our art, but they are principal players in its production.

Highlights

  • These three extracts provide an introduction to our subject: the factors affecting the representation of the Bahamian landscape in art

  • Limerick, who likens the exploitation of Bahamians to the use and abuse of the endangered conch, asks: Still ravaged by the florid foins of effluent America will we find jaded dignity when custom seeks more virgin soil as pleasure’s surfeit pales? or are we doomed by torture to a lifetime on our back? (1993, p. 87)

  • Among the most popular subjects of Bahamian secular recorded music is the radical transformation of Bahamian ways of life since majority rule and Independence; the transformation in the material conditions of black Bahamians and the ways in which our culture has been adapted to suit that transformation. These songs mourn the loss of Island Life, they reminisce about the Good Old Days in The Bahamas, before modernization and urbanization, they offer a kind of cultural nationalism rooted in the rural Bahamian past, rooted in practices, foodways, rituals that preceded the transformation of family structures, the collapse of Family Island settlements, the overpopulation of Nassau, the onslaught of American commercialism

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Summary

Introduction

These three extracts provide an introduction to our subject: the factors affecting the representation of the Bahamian landscape in art. 53 connections between the Bahamian nostalgia for the rural Family Island past and touristic idealizations of Caribbean island life.

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