Guyana Junction, globalisation, localisation, and the production of East Indianness
http://www.caribbeanmuslims.com/articles/1015/1/Guyana-Junction-globalisation-localisation-and-the-production-of-East-Indianness/Page1.html
Johannes Gerrit de Kruijf
By Johannes Gerrit de Kruijf
Published on 06/5/2008
Guyana Junction involves the analysis of the construction
of East Indian ethnic and religious distinction in Guyana. It is a book in
which the author endeavours to examine the manner in which Indian
ethnic/religious culture as well as Indian tainted personal meaning and
practice are produced and reproduced in a society shaped by the force of
interethnic struggles and globalisation. The dissertation is an account of
the attempt to investigate the productive interplay between the creative
individual/collective and his or her delimiting surroundings in a way that
is inspired by Bourdieu's Theory of Practice but seeks to develop a more
sophisticated model to account for the processes of transformation and the
complexity that characterise the East Indian's contemporary world.
Insights from psychological anthropology and connectionism are employed to
elaborate an alternative approach to cultural change in increasingly
globalised environs. Although an example of current-day ethnography, it is
an investigation of a process rather than a people. This intricate process
is dissected by focussing on local Indian ways, motivations, and
explanations, some of its externalisations, plus the historical and
contemporary context in which 'marks of East Indianness' have arisen and
continue evolve. The book consists of two parts. The first part concerns
the examination of the context and the contextual processes that define
and redefine the conditions under which East Indians engage in processes
of cultural production and reproduction. The second part focuses on
relationships. It explores connections between the East Indians and others
or their surroundings through which that (re)creative process becomes
clear. Part II respectively deals with relationships between: East Indians
and the globalised world; East Indians and friends and relatives; East
Indians and their life partners; and East Indians and the divine world.