Box 25: Archival Secrets, Caribbean Workers, and the Panama Canal

Author:   Julie Greene ,  Lisa Adams
Publisher:   The University of North Carolina Press
ISBN:  

9781469679471


Pages:   184
Publication Date:   31 January 2025
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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Box 25: Archival Secrets, Caribbean Workers, and the Panama Canal


Overview

When acclaimed labor historian Julie M. Greene researched her book The Canal Builders, which went on to be nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in 2009, she explored a cache of first-person essays written in 1963 by the Afro-Caribbean people, mainly Jamaican and Barbadian, who migrated to the Isthmus of Panama to work as diggers, track shifters, or domestic servants in the Canal Zone. Held at the Library of Congress and stored in Box 25 of the Isthmian Historical Society Collection, they constitute the best primary source in existence on Caribbean workers' experiences during the construction project. Now Greene returns to this fascinating archive, and in this book, shares what it was like to be a migrant laborer on the construction of the Panama Canal. Caribbean workers faced life-threatening illnesses, accidents, racial discrimination, and culture clashes as well as the opportunity to materially improve their lives. Greene offers new details on the strategies of the people who built the canal and examines how colonialism, xenophobia, and racism shaped the process of writing and archiving the testimonies into Box 25.

Full Product Details

Author:   Julie Greene ,  Lisa Adams
Publisher:   The University of North Carolina Press
Imprint:   The University of North Carolina Press
ISBN:  

9781469679471


ISBN 10:   1469679477
Pages:   184
Publication Date:   31 January 2025
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

Table of Contents

Reviews

""Box 25 offers a master class on how to bring back voices from the past to reshape our understanding and provoke new insights. Julie Greene digs deep into the seemingly mundane and long-buried archive to excavate hidden treasure, just as its subjects dug down mountains to create the Panama Canal. It was thrilling to feel these workers and their world come alive again.""--Olive Senior, author of Dying to Better Themselves: West Indians and the Building of the Panama Canal ""A remarkable work of archival and narrative excavation that brings to the surface the layered lives of Caribbean laborers who built the Panama Canal. This book is not only an intervention in the history of labor and empire, but also a sharp reflection on how archives are formed, silenced, and reanimated.""--H-Sci-Med-Tech ""An extremely powerful text that reframes key touchpoints in the history of the Panama Canal by centering the perspectives of West Indian workers.""--Joan Flores-Villalobos, author of The Silver Women: How Black Women's Labor Made the Panama Canal ""At once, Julie Greene skillfully shows us the virtues and limitations of one peculiar archival source and the magic of making connections through both our research craft and the histories we write.""--Jorge L. Giovannetti-Torres, author of Black British Migrants in Cuba: Race, Labor, and Empire in the Twentieth-Century Caribbean, 1898- 1948 ""With a deep dive into Box 25, Greene challenges us to reckon with the power, fragility, and silences of the archives.""--Jana Lipman, author of In Camps: Vietnamese Refugees, Asylum Seekers, and Repatriates ""Without pretension or jargon, Greene shows us how making good use of the documents in Box 25 required understanding geopolitical power, government personnel records, archival theory, life narratives, and community-engaged public history. A bravura performance, wrapped into an unputdownable read.""--Lara Putnam, author of Radical Moves: Caribbean Migrants and the Politics of Race in the Jazz Age


""A remarkable work of archival and narrative excavation that brings to the surface the layered lives of Caribbean laborers who built the Panama Canal. This book is not only an intervention in the history of labor and empire, but also a sharp reflection on how archives are formed, silenced, and reanimated.""--H-Sci-Med-Tech


Author Information

Julie M. Greene is professor of history at the University of Maryland, College Park.

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Latest Reading Guide

NOV RG 20252

 

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