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Chapitre D'ouvrage Année : 2013

Islanders, immigrants and millionaires

Résumé

Saint-Barthélemy is one of the most exclusive seaside resorts in the world. The three groups interacting locally – historic Saint-Barths, metropolitan immigrants, and super-rich vacationers or villa owners – are all overwhelmingly white. Their cohabitation maintains the elitist character of the island, while obliterating most of its Caribbean heritage. St. Barts’ resort identity is structured around a generic brand of exoticism, local variation of a global space of upper-class leisure. By insisting on the multi-class co-production of elite seaside locations, we lay emphasis on the roles of service relations and upper-class dynamics of distinction in the reconfiguration of local cultures within the places patronized by the super-rich.St. Barts’ resort identity is structured around a generic brand of exoticism, local variation of a global space of upper-class leisure. By insisting on the multi-class co-production of elite seaside locations, we lay emphasis on the roles of service relations and upper-class dynamics of distinction in the reconfiguration of local cultures within the places patronized by the super-rich.
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Dates et versions

hal-02396225 , version 1 (05-12-2019)

Identifiants

Citer

Bruno Cousin, Sébastien Chauvin. Islanders, immigrants and millionaires: the dynamics of upper-class segregation in St Barts, French West Indies. Iain Hay. Geographies of the Super-Rich, Edward Elgar Publishing, pp.186 - 200, 2013, 9780857935687. ⟨hal-02396225⟩
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