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Selvon’s Bush Coolie: Producing Backwardness in “Cane is Bitter” and The Plains of Caroni Cover

Selvon’s Bush Coolie: Producing Backwardness in “Cane is Bitter” and The Plains of Caroni

By: Kris Singh  
Open Access
|Sep 2025

Abstract

Drawing on Lisa Lowe’s and Radhika Mongia’s studies of the intertwinement of liberalism and indentureship, I argue that Selvon’s “Cane is Bitter” and The Plains of Caroni extend the liberal narrative of modern progress. In both texts, Selvon valorizes the modern East Indian’s choice to forget all that is associated with the village in order to pursue self-realization in the city. Selvon does so, however, by conjuring the bush coolie, the backward East Indian of the village against whom the modern East Indian is defined. Selvon’s dependence on this figure negates the value of a sociological reading of both texts. Instead, “Cane is Bitter” and The Plains of Caroni allow for an examination of the production of difference within post-indentureship portrayals of East Indians. I consider the implications of Selvon’s emphasis on consent, ethical individualism, and geographical distinction, and I argue that Selvon’s affirmation of the future of the modern East Indian necessitates his production of those unfit for that future.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.33596/anth.520 | Journal eISSN: 1547-7150
Language: English
Published on: Sep 17, 2025
Published by: University of Miami Libraries
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2025 Kris Singh, published by University of Miami Libraries
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.