Siren Songs: a history of Bermuda from 1960 to 1980

Siren Songs: a history of Bermuda from 1960 to 1980

ParJonathan Land Evans

Habituellement imprimé en 3-5 jours ouvrés
Continuing the author's wide-ranging series of books on Bermuda's modern history, "Siren Songs" covers a very prosperous but also very troubled period, notable for controversial political modernisation, labour unrest, Black Power extremism and crime, yet also for continued success in tourism and a growing success in international business (including a promising new industry in the form of "captive" insurance companies for major American corporations, which would eventually make tiny mid-Atlantic Bermuda the world's third-largest insurance market). Agitation for universal adult suffrage, the emergence of the left-wing Progressive Labour Party as the island's first big political party, and the embracing by many black Bermudians of fashionable anti-white, anti-Establishment radicalism from the wider world, set the stage for a tumultuous period, even as the electorate repeatedly voted for the more moderate, centre-right and bi-racial, United Bermuda Party. Meanwhile, Bermuda remained a significant NATO outpost.

Détails

Date de publication
Oct 27, 2015
Langue
English
Catégorie
Histoire
Copyright
Tous droits réservés - Licence de copyright standard
Contributeurs
Par (auteur): Jonathan Land Evans

Caractéristiques

Pages
576
Type de reliure
Livre à couverture souple Livre à couverture souple
Couleur de l’intérieur
Noir & Blanc
Dimensions
Lettre US (8,5 x 11 po / 216 x 279 mm)

Notes & Avis