"All you need is love, but a little chocolate now and then doesn't hurt."

"All you need is love, but a little chocolate now and then doesn't hurt."

Monday, September 22, 2014

"A Small Place" by Jamaica Kincaid (Section 1 and 2)

"If you go to Antigua as a tourist, this is what you will see." Jamaica Kincaid, writer and novelist, introduces her book letting know the readers about the topic and place of interest: Antigua. Kincaid starts the first section of A Small Place, 1989, giving thoughts and experiences of the tourists who visit Antigua. She recreates the tourist's point of view as one from comments like "What a beautiful island Antigua is" since the airplane descends to land or "Oh, what a marvelous change these bad roads are from the splendid highways I am used to in North America" while the taxi driver is carrying them to their destination at the island. Kincaid describes the tourists as those who are interested in the natural beauty of the island, the beach, the sunny days or the hot and clear air instead of knowing what is really happening in  Antigua.

Between all these tourists' utopia there is an island filled with problems like corruption, drug dealing, poverty, health services, education, criminality, draught and racism. The author keeps narrating the tour on the island while explaining some of these problems stated before. About the corruption, she states the government encouraged the banks to make loans available for cars. Therefore, most of the people drive expensive Japanese cars, but filling the gas tank with the wrong kind of gasoline. About the drug dealing and criminality, she focuses on a mansion which is the house of the drug smuggler and everybody knows about him and what he does for living. As another example, she states about the health services that there's the Holberton Hospital which is staffed with doctors that any Antiguan trusts including the Minister of Health. On the other hand, Kincaid describes the building of the Pigott's School as one which is full of dust and would be easily confused with some latrines. The author also mentions the damage library which it repairs still waiting from the earthquake of 1974.

On the second section of the book, Kincaid focuses on a retrospective view of her life in the old Antigua ruled by England. She mentions the different circumstances in which racism and poverty were very noticeable. "People can recite the name of the first Antiguan (black person) to eat a sandwich at a clubhouse and the day on which it happened; people can recite the name of the first Antiguan (black person) to play golf on the golf course and the day on which the event took place." Jamaica Kincaid expresses her insider view of her birthplace, but I firmly believe every tourist should became an outsider insider by searching information of the place they will going to visit.

"That the native does not like the tourist is not hard to explain. For every native of every place is a potential tourist, and every tourist is a native of somewhere." - Jamaica Kincaid



4 comments:

  1. We can never forget like the author states: "For every native of every place is a potential tourist, and every tourist is a native of somewhere." We will be natives and tourists at some point in our lives and I believe it's our responsibility to really get to know the places we are visiting.

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    1. Exactly. We must look up information of the place we want to go after we arrived there. Thanks for your comment, Valeria!

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  2. I really loved that last quote by Jamaica Kincaid, "That the native does not like the tourist is not hard to explain. For every native of every place is a potential tourist, and every tourist is a native of somewhere". This is so true, everyone is a tourist at some point. Even in the same country they live in, maybe they would feel like a "tourist" in a neighborhood not commonly visited.

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    1. Yeah, that's true and it happens more than we think. We are not only tourists at other countries, but also in our homeland. Thanks for your comment, Liane!

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