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Ital Itineraries: Rastafari Eco-Tourism in St Lucia/Iyanola and Visions for Community Autonomy

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Abstract

The island of St Lucia has undergone a dramatic transformation in a matter of decades, meta-morphosing from a monocrop banana economy to a high end tourist destination which generates billions of dollars of revenue for those who operate it. This transformation has however seen a tourism industry develop that relies on Western models of environmental destruction and deg-radation. For Rastafari communities in St Lucia this represents a direct challenge to a central and deeply green ecological ethic which lays at the heart of the movement. Instead, some offer an al-ternative – eco-tourism. Several Rastafari are today engaged in offering an experience to visitors which brings them closer to this naturality rather than separating them from. To do so however is not without challenge. Many Rastafari seek to avoid as far as is possible all forms of engagement with a ‘Babylonian’ system that has persecuted and derided the movement. For these individuals, it is only through the establishment of agrarian communes entirely separate from governmental systems and means of production that Rastafari might achieve a spirituality and a living modal-ity free from corruption. These Rastafari eco-tourism ventures offer an alternative to this vision in presenting an alternative path to a shared ambition of self-sufficiency. Through ethnographic re-search on the island this paper seeks to situate and explore Rastafari eco-tourism as a vision for community autonomy.

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Religions

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2077-1444
2077-1444

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MDPI AG

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International
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University of Cambridge