Is Surinam a Carribean Island like the others ? - Université de La Réunion Access content directly
Journal Articles Caribbean Atlas Year : 2013

Is Surinam a Carribean Island like the others ?

Le Suriname : une île caribéenne comme les autres

Abstract

Suriname is the smallest country in South America. However, in regional academic literature, it has been repeatedly considered one of the largest Caribbean territories for many years (Best 1967; Granger 2008). This territory is generally included in the socio-historical group of the three Guianas (Lézy 2000), or the bio-geographical group of the Guiana Plateau. Additionally, Suriname is frequently considered part of the insular Caribbean (Girvan 2005). The latter consideration implies a geographical paradox that is twofold. In fact, Suriname, French Guiana and Guyana are not directly bordered by the Caribbean Sea. Moreover, like Belize, which is also commonly included in the Caribbean island group, Suriname is not an island in the strict sense of the word, i.e. land surrounded by water, based on the restricted definition of the term. Nevertheless, the Caribbean cannot be defined today on the sole basis of a deterministic relationship with the sea bearing the same name. Further, research conducted on insularity increasingly demonstrates the limitations of the physical nature of the island, in favour of feelings of belonging, alienation, etc. (Taglioni 2003).

Keywords

Domains

Geography
Fichier principal
Vignette du fichier
Suriname.pdf (473.36 Ko) Télécharger le fichier
Origin Files produced by the author(s)

Dates and versions

hal-01244081 , version 1 (16-04-2017)

Identifiers

  • HAL Id : hal-01244081 , version 1

Cite

François Taglioni, Romain Cruse. Is Surinam a Carribean Island like the others ?. Caribbean Atlas, 2013, 5 p. ⟨hal-01244081⟩
434 View
167 Download

Share

Gmail Mastodon Facebook X LinkedIn More