The Dead Yard: Ian Thomson
Synopsis:
Jamaica used to the source of much of Britain’s wealth, an island where slaves grew sugar and the money flowed out in vast quantities. It was a tropical paradise for the planters, a Babylonian exile for the Africans shipped to the Caribbean. Since independence in 1962, it has gradually become associated with a new kind of hell, a society where extreme violence has become ordinary and gangs control the areas where most Jamaicans live.
Ian Thomson’s brave new book explores a country of lost promise, a country that most older Jamaicans in Britain cannot recognise as their own. Once a beacon of optimistic third world politics, the island is now sunk in corruption, hopelessness and drug wars. Jamaica’s music was once the lilting anthem of idealists everywhere; now it is a repetitive glorification of homophobia and violence.
Thomson walks the streets and rides the buses that most middle-class Jamaicans, let alone white visitors, avoid like the plague. He describes poverty, the reality of gang rule and police brutality. He meets Jamaicans who are trying to make a difference, and astonishingly complacent members of the elite.
This is an unforgettable portrait of a country that has had a huge influence on British culture, for good and ill.
Tags:
- Categorised as:
- Non-fiction
- Sub-categories:
- Current Affairs
- Places:
- Caribbean; Jamaica
- Genres & Themes:
- Colonialism; Drugs; Gangs; Slavery; Violence
- Awards & Prizes:
- Ondaatje Prize - Winner 2010; Dolman Travel Book of the Year - Winner 2010
- Selected edition:
- Paperback
- ISBN:
- 9780571227617
- Published:
- 07.05.2009
- No of pages:
- 384