What do the Madagascan Poinciana tree, the South American Bougainvillea bush, and the Australian Casuarina pine have in common with 300,000 people of primarily West African descent?
Firstly, they all contribute to making the Bahamas what it is—paradise.
Secondly, they are all well-adjusted aliens; bright, buoyant, beautiful immigrants so well entrenched in Bahamian land, soil, and ways that one might assume they had been in the country for thousands of years.
This is preferable. Witness the jaunty effervescence of the tourism jingle 'It's Better in the Bahamas'. As a nation whose livelihood is dependant on the appearance of bliss, it is clearly beneficial to perpetuate the concept of cheery, carefree natives—be they brown of skin or red of flower. Bahamians, it may be said, are like rows of crimson royal Poinciana arching to canopy across a Nassau avenue, like gardens brimming full with peach and fuchsia Bougainvillea, like lines of shore-shading Casuarinas; resplendent beings magnificently entrenched in the land.
Gardening explores the identities of these allegedly well-adjusted aliens, both human and botanic. This means celebrating the Poinciana's fiery summertime blooms. This means dipping into the dirt exposed when said Poinciana is toppled, post-hurricane, its root system too weakly joined to the land's thin and rocky soil to withstand strong storm winds.
If Bahamian people are like the plants that surround them, what are we to take from the Casuarina pine, an invasive import currently colonizing the island coastlines? And what from the national tree, Lignum Vitae, now virtually unknown?
Gardening, through poetry and short fiction, explores the beauty and madness of what are currently considered Bahamian people and plants. This exploration is both explicit and indirect; some pieces ponder the significance of intermittently beautiful and fragile lives. Others seek to capture the incongruity of identity, classification, and everyday life in a land where the concept of indigenity is an enormous fraud.

  1. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/423
Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:LACETR/oai:collectionscanada.gc.ca:BVAU./423
Date05 1900
CreatorsMather, Janice Lynn
Source SetsLibrary and Archives Canada ETDs Repository / Centre d'archives des thèses électroniques de Bibliothèque et Archives Canada
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Format5868460 bytes, application/pdf

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