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Local and National Approaches to Nature Preservation: The US Virgin Islands National Park on St John and Beyond
National parks constitute powerful focal points in the building of national communities, both as concrete areas of land that offer a commons shared by members of a larger society, and as particular landscapes that symbolise certain cultural values and social relations. The commons, which is envisioned and cherished by members of a larger imagined national community may, however, be quite different from the commons that is used and experienced by members of a local community that has emerged and been sustained in close interaction with a particular natural environment. This paper discusses the uneasy relations between the generalised ‘wilderness' commons of the American Virgin Islands National Park, and the local commons of marginal estate land, village resources and family land that have played a central role in the African-Caribbean community on St John through time. The analysis is based on historical and ethnographic research on the Virgin Island of St John, carried out from 1974 to 1996.
Local and National Approaches to Nature Preservation: The US Virgin Islands National Park on St John and Beyond
National parks constitute powerful focal points in the building of national communities, both as concrete areas of land that offer a commons shared by members of a larger society, and as particular landscapes that symbolise certain cultural values and social relations. The commons, which is envisioned and cherished by members of a larger imagined national community may, however, be quite different from the commons that is used and experienced by members of a local community that has emerged and been sustained in close interaction with a particular natural environment. This paper discusses the uneasy relations between the generalised ‘wilderness' commons of the American Virgin Islands National Park, and the local commons of marginal estate land, village resources and family land that have played a central role in the African-Caribbean community on St John through time. The analysis is based on historical and ethnographic research on the Virgin Island of St John, carried out from 1974 to 1996.
Local and National Approaches to Nature Preservation: The US Virgin Islands National Park on St John and Beyond
Olwig, Karen Fog (author)
Landscape Research ; 34 ; 189-204
2009-04-01
16 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
Unknown
British Library Online Contents | 2009
|St. John-Virgin Islands National Park
NTIS | 1994
Environmental Attitude by Trip and Visitor Characteristics: U.S. Virgin Islands National Park
British Library Conference Proceedings | 1992
|