From the Banana Zones to the Big Easy

From the Banana Zones to the Big Easy - Cover

West Indian and Central American Immigration to New Orleans, 1910–1940

by Glenn A. Chambers

200 pages / 5.50 x 8.50 inches / 5 halftones, 5 tables, 1 map

ebook available

African-American Studies | History / Latin America & Caribbean | History / United States - Southern History

Hardcover / 9780807170496 / August 2019

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.

The West Indian population in early twentieth-century New Orleans was truly transnational, multinational, multilingual, diasporic, and constantly evolving. These newcomers to New Orleans remained conscious of their West Indian roots but were not bound by them. Their experiences spanned nations but were not politically internationalist, as was the case with the larger West Indian communities in the northeastern United States. The ways in which individuals and families transitioned into U.S. constructions of race were at times the result of conscious decisions. In other instances, race was determined by the realities of everyday life in the Jim Crow South, in which whiteness translated into access and opportunity and all other ethnicities were relegated to a subordinate position. Many West Indians and Central Americans impacted by this system learned to navigate it in such a way that their ethnic and national identity all but disappeared from the historical record.

Through an analysis of arrest records, ships’ passenger records, foreign consulate reports, draft registrations, declarations of intent to apply for citizenship, naturalization applications, and city directories, Chambers recovers the lives of a small but significant population of immigrants who challenged the racial status quo.

Glenn A. Chambers is associate professor of history at Michigan State University and the author of Race, Nation, and West Indian Immigration to Honduras, 1890–1940.

Praise for From the Banana Zones to the Big Easy

“In this fascinating and original book, historian Glenn Chambers expertly traces the lives of West Indians and Central Americans who migrated to New Orleans during the twentieth century. The dynamic stories that take center stage in this deeply researched book underscore the centrality of travel and migration in shaping racial identities in the United States and beyond.”— Keisha N. Blain, author of Set the World on Fire: Black Nationalist Women and the Global Struggle for Freedom

“Glenn Chambers's archivally rich yet wonderfully accessible study of West Indian and Central American experiences in banana enclaves, as sailors, and finally as migrants to New Orleans is a vital reorientation of the regions' entangled histories that enriches the scholarship of Caribbean and Latin American migration and challengers our understanding of diasporic identity formation.”— Justin Wolfe, coeditor Blacks and Blackness in Central America: Between Race and Place

From the Banana Zones to the Big Easy is a well-researched, highly nuanced history of West Indian and Central American immigration to New Orleans, from just after the turn of the last century until the beginning of World War II. . . . Chambers has handled with skill and finesse the challenging task of writing a history of a small group of people within the Caribbean and Central American population.”—Louisiana History

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