The Girmitiya Peasants in Suriname: Agrarian and economic transformations in a plantation society

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Abstract

This book examines the Indo-Surinamese Girmitiya peasants and their contributions to developing the ethnic community within their newly adopted home. It demonstrates the transformation of the Girmitiyas from agriculturalists in British India to plantation labourers to peasants and finally to urban dwellers. The author argues that it was the Girmitiya peasants who had made greater contributions to developing the ethnic community over the labourers of whom about one-third returned to British India. The work covers the history of how the peasants institutionalised their practice, changed the physical landscape and integrated economically and politically as an ethnic group in their newly adopted homeland. Furthermore, the author presents arguments to demonstrate that Girmitiya peasants survived the plantation labour and peasant life due to their knowledge and skills of agrarian cultivation, known as agrarian human capital. The scholarly literature about the labour migration from British India has focused heavily on the fate of the labourers. Consequently, the history of the Girmitiya peasants as well as the cultural heritage they have produced has been grossly neglected. This book purports to fill this void by telling the history of Girmitiya peasants in Suriname, a Caribbean society adjacent to former British Guyana.
Original languageEnglish
PublisherSpringer Nature
Number of pages287
ISBN (Electronic)9783031679612
ISBN (Print)9783031679605, 9783031679636
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s). All rights reserved.

Keywords

  • British Indian Indentured labourers
  • Ethnic community development
  • Ethnic heritage
  • Girmitiya culture
  • Girmitiya diaspora
  • Historical transformations
  • Homemaking
  • Plantation colonies
  • Plural societies
  • Rice peasants

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