preview

Jamaica Kincaid's Memoir 'A Small Place'

Decent Essays

Jamaica Kincaid’s part memoir, part social commentary and historical flashback “A Small Place” is unique due to the perspective that it gives the reader about Kincaid’s home and the people who inhabit it. Jamaica speaks to the reader in the second person first, citing each part of the text as a direct message to the reader, making them a part of the story she is trying to tell. This is essential for Kincaid to put the reader in the right frame of mind to retain the information located in the rest of the book. Kincaid is direct and uses a scathing tone that forces the reader to confront their actions and feelings regarding the subject of tourism. Kincaid can safely target any class in most countries because even those in poor economic situations …show more content…

The reason that the personal memoir begins later is because Kincaid has already made us care about herself and the island as a whole by putting us directly into the story, forcing us to play a role if we continue to read her words. Kincaid talks about how the cable company is owned by the prime minister’s son, a well-known drug dealer and prostitution ring are both overlooked by the Prime Minister due to his benefit from their services. She speaks of the hospital being unfit for operation, with all of the rich people inhabiting Antigua flying abroad to the United States for all of their medical examinations and procedures. Our nature when reading something true and horrible, regardless of if we chose to admit it, is what does this have to do with me, or what can I do about it? Well, Kincaid directly puts us all in the story, forcing us to take notice of what is happening around us, making us tourists also indirectly makes us accomplices. Condoning this type of behavior is what tourists do when they turn the other way at the poor living conditions of the natives, continuing to pour cash into the rich and corrupted

Get Access