Over fifty years after Jamaican and Trinidadian independence Imagining Caribbean womanhood examines the links between beauty and politics in the Anglophone Caribbean providing a first cultural history of Caribbean beauty competitions spanning from Kingston to London. It traces the origins and transformation of female beauty contests in the British Caribbean from 1929 to 1970 through the development of cultural nationalism race-conscious politics and decolonisation. The beauty contest a seemingly marginal phenomenon is used to illuminate the persistence of racial supremacy the advance of consumer culture and the negotiation of race and nation through the idealised performance of cultured modern beauty. Modern Caribbean femininity was intended to be politically functional but also commercially viable and subtly eroticised. -- .
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