Wednesday 16 December 2009

At Last: A Christmas in the West Indies



A fitting title to highlight as we first experience snow this winter. The author, Charles Kingsley was an Engligh clergymen,  novelist, and historian, best known perhaps for his book The Water Babies. 

At Last: A Christmas in the West Indies, describes the author's travels to the West Indies, largely focussed on Trinidad, in 1869. The book is illustrated and includes botanical illustrations. It is in many ways a typical 'travel' book of its time, rich in description and presenting an 'imperial' position and outlook on the colony, although as critics such as Claudia Brandenstein, Simon Gikandi and Catherine Hall have pointed out, this position is complicated and in some respects an ambivalent one.




Kingsley went to the West Indies with liberal and Christian sympathies, but he found it difficult to be objective about what he witnessed due to his theological background and intellectual tradition. For example, he supported the strict control and supervision of the indentured Coolies, even though in England he was a strong advocate of emancipation and the creation of a '"moral bond"' between employee and employer. Gikandi argues that Kingsley reached this conclusion about the West Indian context not because of what he saw there or because of his understanding of the Coolies' own views and perspectives. "Rather the traveler reaches his conclusions from three mutually informing sources: official reports (both oral and written), intellectual Orientalism, and evolutionary doctrines".

Interested readers can of course consult this book in the library, It is also available in a full text digitised version within the Internet Archive.

This work is but one of many such works by travellers reporting on the Caribbean within the collection. If interested in other works please contact library staff.

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