This article explores the history of the Foundation for Cultural Cooperation between the Netherlands, Suriname, and the Netherlands Antilles (Sticusa), asking how cultural institutions partook in the process of decolonization. Analyzing the perspectives of Sticusa collaborators and critics in the Caribbean, I argue that cultural actors saw decolonization as an opportunity to reorient cultures toward an emergent world order. In this process, they envisioned a range of horizons, from closer integration with Europe to enhanced affinity with the broader Americas. By the 1970s, however, these horizons narrowed to the attainment of national sovereignty, and Sticusa’s cultural experiment ended as a result.
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The Environment as an Umbrella Concept; From Word to Historical Concept
Risto-Matti Matero and Juan Alejandro Pautasso
Peninsula, the United States, the French Antilles, Brazil, and part of Hispanic America. The volume forms part of the prolific and vast historiographical reflections and studies that derive from the heterogeneous bicentennial celebrations in the Iberian
The Return of N'Guyen Van Binh
Exile and Injustice in the French Empire, 1866–1876
Geoff Read
the colony immediately. He hoped, therefore, that they could be redirected from France to the Antilles to find work. 14 Conditions on the voyage were harsh. As the maritime prefect in Toulon complained, the prisoners arrived in his care in “a
« Nous ne voulons pas de Blancs dans le pays »
l'insurrection des populations de la Haute-Sangha et la pacification de l'espace rebelle (1928–1931)
Patrick Dramé
émergente », art. cit. 46 Ministère de la guerre, Manuel à l'usage des troupes employées outre-mer. Deuxième partie. Fasc. 2 : Afrique Occidentale et Équatoriale. Antilles et Guyane , Paris, Charles-Lavauzelle et Cie, 1937. 47 CHETOM, 15 H 54, Dossier