A Small Place

by

Jamaica Kincaid

Teachers and parents! Our Teacher Edition on A Small Place makes teaching easy.

Antigua Symbol Analysis

Antigua Symbol Icon

In A Small Place, Jamaica Kincaid offers the island nation of Antigua as a microcosm—a small world that provides lessons that one can apply to the larger world—in which to examine the legacies of slavery, racism, and colonialism throughout the world. Small, beautiful, and decidedly different from the North American and European countries from which its early colonizers and recent tourists hail, A Small Place describes Antigua as an island suspended in place and time. This allows it to function fluidly throughout the course of the book, becoming at one time or another a refuge for tourists to escape their mundane lives, a prison locking in its citizens, and a textbook example of how government corruption and mismanagement can continue the oppression of an allegedly free people.

Antigua Quotes in A Small Place

The A Small Place quotes below all refer to the symbol of Antigua. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Slavery, Colonialism, and Independence Theme Icon
).
Chapter 1  Quotes

Antigua is […] more beautiful than any of the other islands you have seen […] but they were much too green, much too lush with vegetation, which indicated to you, the tourist, that they got quite a bit of rainfall, and rain is the very thing that you, just now, do not want, for you are thinking of the hard and cold and dark and long days you spent working in North America (or, worse, Europe), earning some money so that you could stay in this place (Antigua) where the sun always shines and where the climate is deliciously hot and dry for the four to ten days you are staying there; and since you are a tourist, the thought of what it might be like for someone who had to live day in, day out in a place that suffers constantly from drought […] must never cross your mind.

Related Characters: Jamaica Kincaid (speaker), The Tourist
Related Symbols: Antigua
Page Number: 3-4
Explanation and Analysis:

You must not wonder what exactly happened to the contents of your lavatory when you flushed it. You must not wonder where your bathwater went when you pulled out the stopper. You must not wonder what happened when you brushed your teeth. Oh, it might all end up in the water you are thinking of taking a swim in; the contents of your lavatory might, just might, graze gently against your ankle as you wade carefree in the water, for you see, in Antigua, there is no proper sewage-disposal system. But the Caribbean Sea as very big and the Atlantic Ocean is even bigger; it would amaze you to know the number of black slaves this ocean has swallowed up.

Related Characters: Jamaica Kincaid (speaker), The Tourist
Related Symbols: Antigua
Page Number: 13-14
Explanation and Analysis:

An ugly thing, that is what you are when you become a tourist, an ugly, empty thing, a stupid thing, a piece of rubbish pausing here and there to gaze at this and taste that, and it will never occur to you that the people who inhabit the place in which you have just paused cannot stand you […] They do not like you. They do not like me! That thought never actually occurs to you. Still, you feel a little uneasy. Still, you feel a little foolish. Still, you feel a little out of place. But the banality of your own life is very real to you; it drove you to this extreme, spending your days and nights in the company of people who despise you, people you do not like really, people you would not want to have as your actual neighbor.

Related Characters: Jamaica Kincaid (speaker), The Tourist
Related Symbols: Antigua
Page Number: 17-18
Explanation and Analysis:

That the native does not like the tourist is not hard to explain. […] Every native lives a life of overwhelming and crushing banality and boredom and desperation and depression, and every deed, good and bad, is an attempt to forget this. Every native would like to find a way out, every native would like a rest, every native would like a tour. But […] most natives in the world […] cannot go anywhere. They are too poor […]to escape the reality of their lives; and they are too poor to live properly in the place where they live, which is the very place you, the tourist, want to go—so when the natives see you, the tourist, they envy you, they envy your ability to leave your own banality and boredom, they envy your ability to turn their own banality and boredom into a source of pleasure for yourself.

Related Characters: Jamaica Kincaid (speaker), The Tourist
Related Symbols: Antigua
Page Number: 18-19
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 2 Quotes

Have you ever wondered to yourself why it is that all people like me seem to have learned from you is how to imprison and murder each other, how to govern badly, and how to take the wealth of our country and place it in Swiss bank accounts? Have you ever wondered why it is that all we seem to have learned from you is how to corrupt our societies and how to be tyrants? You will have to accept that it is mostly your fault. Let me just show you how things looked to us. You came. You took things that were not yours, and you did not even, for appearances’ sake, ask first […] You murdered people. You imprisoned people. You robbed people. You opened your own banks and put our money in them. The accounts were in your name. The banks were in your name.

Related Characters: Jamaica Kincaid (speaker), The Tourist
Related Symbols: Antigua
Page Number: 35
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3  Quotes

But if you saw the old library, situated as it was, in a big, old wooden building painted a shade of yellow that is beautiful to people like me, with its wide verandah, its big, always open windows, its rows and rows of shelves filled with books, its beautiful wooden tables and chairs for sitting and reading, […] the beauty of us sitting there like communicants at an altar, taking in, again and again, the fairy tale of how we met you, your right to do the things you did, how beautiful you were, are, and always will be; if you could see all of that in just one glimpse, you would see why my heart would break at the dung heap that now passes for a library in Antigua.

Related Characters: Jamaica Kincaid (speaker), The Tourist
Related Symbols: Antigua, Library, Mill Reef Club
Page Number: 42-43
Explanation and Analysis:

(In Antigua today, most young people seem almost illiterate. On the airwaves where they work as news personalities, they speak English as if it were their sixth language. Once, I attended an event at carnival time called a “Teenage Pageant.” In this event, teenagers […] paraded around on a stadium stage singing pop songs […], reciting poems they had written about slavery […], and generally making asses of themselves. What surprised me most about them was […] how stupid they seemed, how unable they were to answer in a straightforward way, and in their native tongue of English, simple questions about themselves. In my generation, they would not have been allowed on the school stage, much less before an audience in a stadium.)

Related Characters: Jamaica Kincaid (speaker), The Tourist
Related Symbols: Antigua, Library
Page Number: 43-44
Explanation and Analysis:

I then went to see a woman whose family had helped to establish the Mill Reef Club […] who was very active in getting the old library restored […] After I mentioned the library to her, the first thing she told me was that she always encouraged her girls and her girls’ children to use the library, and by her girls she meant grownup Antiguan women (not unlike me) who work in her gift shop as seamstresses and saleswomen. She said to me then what everybody in Antigua says sooner or later: The government is for sale; anybody from anywhere can come to Antigua and for a sum of money can get what he wants […] I could see the pleasure she took in pointing out to me the gutter into which a self-governing—black—Antigua had placed itself.

Related Characters: Jamaica Kincaid (speaker), The Tourist
Related Symbols: Antigua, Library, Mill Reef Club
Page Number: 47
Explanation and Analysis:

Countries with Ministers of Culture must be like countries with Liberty Weekend. Do you remember Liberty Weekend? In the week before Liberty Weekend, the United States Supreme Court ruled that ordinary grown-up people could not do as they pleased behind the locked doors of their own bedroom. I would have thought, then, that the people whose idea it was to have the Liberty Weekend business would have been so ashamed at such a repudiation of liberty that they would have cancelled the whole thing. But not at all; and so in a country that had less liberty than it used to have, Liberty Weekend was celebrated.

Related Characters: Jamaica Kincaid (speaker)
Related Symbols: Antigua
Page Number: 49
Explanation and Analysis:

Once there was a scandal about stamps issued for Redonda. A lot of money was made on these stamps, but no one seems to know who got the money or where the stamps actually ended up. Where do all these stamps, in all their colourfulness, where do they come from? I mean, whose idea is it? I mean, Antigua has no stamp designer on the government payroll; there is no building that houses the dyes and the paper on which the stamps are printed; there is no Department of Printing. So who decides to print stamps celebrating the Queen of England’s birthday? Who decides to celebrate Mickey Mouse’s birthday? Who decides that stamps from this part of the world should be colourful and bright and not sedate and subdued, like, say, a stamp from Canada?

Related Characters: Jamaica Kincaid (speaker)
Related Symbols: Antigua
Page Number: 51-52
Explanation and Analysis:

The people in a small place cannot give an exact account, a complete account, of themselves. This cannot be held against them; an exact account, a complete account, of anything, anywhere, is not possible. (The hour in the day, the day of the year some ships set sail is a small, small detail in any picture, any story; but the picture itself, the story itself depend on things that can never, ever be pinned down.) The people in a small place can have no interest in the exact, or in completeness, for that would demand a careful weighing, careful consideration, careful judging, careful questioning. It would demand the invention of a silence, inside of which these things could be done. It would demand a reconsideration, an adjustment in the way they understand the existence of Time. To the people in a small place, the division of Time into the Past, the Present, and the Future does not exist.

Related Characters: Jamaica Kincaid (speaker)
Related Symbols: Antigua
Page Number: 52-53
Explanation and Analysis:

[A]n institution that is often celebrated in Antigua is the Hotel Training School, a school that teaches Antiguans how to be good servants, how to be a good nobody, which is what a servant is. In Antigua, people cannot see a relationship between their obsession with slavery and emancipation and their celebration of the Hotel Training School [… or] between their obsession with slavery and emancipation and the fact that they are governed by corrupt men, or that these corrupt men have given their country away to corrupt foreigners […]. In accounts of the capture and enslavement of black people almost no slave ever mentions who captured and delivered him or her to the European master. In accounts of their corrupt government, Antiguans neglect to say that in twenty years of one form of self-government or another, they have, with one five-year exception, placed power in the present government.

Related Characters: Jamaica Kincaid (speaker), The Tourist, Vere Cornwall Bird
Related Symbols: Antigua
Page Number: 55-56
Explanation and Analysis:

These offshore banks are popular in the West Indies. Only tourism itself is more important. Every government wants these banks, which are modelled on the banks in Switzerland. I have a friend who just came back from Switzerland. What a wonderful time she had. She had never seen cleaner streets anywhere, or more wonderful people anywhere. She was in such a rhapsodic state about the Swiss, and the superior life they lead, that it was hard for me not to bring up how they must pay for this superior life they lead. For […] not a day goes by that I don’t hear about […] some dictator, […] some criminal kingpin who has a secret Swiss bank account. But maybe there is no connection between the wonderful life that the Swiss lead and the ill-gotten money resting in Swiss bank vaults; maybe it’s just a coincidence.

Related Characters: Jamaica Kincaid (speaker)
Related Symbols: Antigua
Page Number: 59-60
Explanation and Analysis:

The papers of the slave-trading family from Barbuda (the Condringtons), the records of their traffic in human lives, were being auctioned. The government of Antigua made a bid for them. Someone else made a larger bid. He was the foreigner. His bid was the successful bid. He then made a gift of these papers to the people of Antigua. And what does it mean? The records of one set of enemies, bought by another enemy, given to the people who have been their victims as a gift.

Related Characters: Jamaica Kincaid (speaker), The Tourist
Related Symbols: Antigua
Page Number: 67-68
Explanation and Analysis:

The people who go into running the government were not always such big thieves; nor have they always been so corrupt. They took things, but it was on a small scale. For instance, if the government built some new housing to be sold to people, then a minister or two would get a few of the houses for themselves […] Everybody knew about this. Some of the ministers were honest. One of them, a famous one in Antigua, a leader of the Trade and Labour Union movement, even died a pauper. Another minister, when his party lost power, had to drive a taxi. It is he, the taxi-driving ex-minister who taught the other ministers a lesson […] All the ministers have “green cards”—a document that makes them legal residents of the United States of America.

Related Characters: Jamaica Kincaid (speaker), The Tourist, Vere Cornwall Bird
Related Symbols: Antigua
Page Number: 68
Explanation and Analysis:

And so they anchor the merchant-importer’s books being burned to the event of the original, honest leaders of the Antigua Trades and Labour Union being maneuvered out of the union they founded and dishonest people taking their place; and they anchor that to the decline of one sort of colonialism and its debasement and its own sort of corruption; and they anchor that to this man, this Prime Minister, who from time to time had seemed like a good man, so well could he spell out the predicament that average Antiguans found themselves in.

Related Characters: Jamaica Kincaid (speaker), Vere Cornwall Bird
Related Symbols: Antigua
Page Number: 71
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4 Quotes

Antigua is too beautiful. Sometimes the beauty of it seems unreal. Sometimes the beauty of it seems as if it sets a stage for a play, for no real sunset could look like that; no real seawater could strike that many shades of blue at once; no real sky could be that shade of blue […] and no real cloud could be that white and float just that way in the sky […] And what might it do to ordinary people to live in this way every day? What might it do to them to live in such heightened, intense surroundings day after day? They have nothing to compare this incredible constant with, no big historical moment to compare the way they are now with the way they used to be […] Nothing, then, natural or unnatural, to leave a mark on their character. It is just a little island.

Related Characters: Jamaica Kincaid (speaker), The Tourist
Related Symbols: Antigua
Page Number: 79-80
Explanation and Analysis:

([A]ll masters of every stripe are rubbish, and all slaves of every stripe are noble and exalted; there can be no question about this) to satisfy their desire for wealth and power […]. Eventually, the masters left in a kind of way; eventually, the slaves were freed, in a kind of way. The people in Antigua now, the people who really think of themselves as Antiguans […] are descendants of those noble and exalted people, the slaves. Of course, the whole thing is, once you cease to be a master, once you throw off your master’s yoke, you are no longer human rubbish, you are just a human being, and all the things that adds up to. Once they are no longer slaves, once they are free, they are no longer noble and exalted; they are just human beings.

Related Characters: Jamaica Kincaid (speaker), The Tourist
Related Symbols: Antigua
Page Number: 80-81
Explanation and Analysis:
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Antigua Symbol Timeline in A Small Place

The timeline below shows where the symbol Antigua appears in A Small Place. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Chapter 1 
Tourism and Empathy  Theme Icon
Rot and Corruption  Theme Icon
...addresses the reader directly, casting them as a tourist and describing an imaginary trip to Antigua. As the tourist, you arrive at an airport named after the Antiguan Prime Minister at... (full context)
Tourism and Empathy  Theme Icon
From the air, you, the tourist, might consider Antigua beautiful. Tourists like you chose to come here from Europe or America to enjoy the... (full context)
Slavery, Colonialism, and Independence Theme Icon
Racism and White Supremacy Theme Icon
Tourism and Empathy  Theme Icon
Rot and Corruption  Theme Icon
...the plane lands, you, the tourist, disembark. You pass through customs seamlessly, unlike the native Antiguans returning from abroad with boxes of cheap clothes to give to their relatives. As you... (full context)
Slavery, Colonialism, and Independence Theme Icon
Racism and White Supremacy Theme Icon
Tourism and Empathy  Theme Icon
The Local and The Global Theme Icon
Rot and Corruption  Theme Icon
Soon after “The Earthquake,” Antigua gained independence from Great Britain. A national holiday marks the date, during which Antiguans go... (full context)
Tourism and Empathy  Theme Icon
Rot and Corruption  Theme Icon
...people, and eating delicious local foods. Just don’t think about where the sewage wastewater goes. Antigua lacks a functioning sewage-disposal system other than the vastness of the Caribbean Sea and the... (full context)
Chapter 2
Slavery, Colonialism, and Independence Theme Icon
Racism and White Supremacy Theme Icon
The Local and The Global Theme Icon
Jamaica Kincaid grew up in an Antigua that no longer exists, so you, the tourist, wouldn’t recognize it. In part, the changes... (full context)
Slavery, Colonialism, and Independence Theme Icon
Racism and White Supremacy Theme Icon
Rot and Corruption  Theme Icon
Kincaid describes the thoroughly colonial Antigua of her childhood: she lived on a street named after “English maritime criminal” Horatio Nelson... (full context)
Slavery, Colonialism, and Independence Theme Icon
Racism and White Supremacy Theme Icon
Tourism and Empathy  Theme Icon
The Local and The Global Theme Icon
The Mill Reef Club also represents the Antigua of Kincaid’s childhood. North Americans founded the members-only, invitation-only club because they wanted to live... (full context)
Slavery, Colonialism, and Independence Theme Icon
Racism and White Supremacy Theme Icon
...seemed to enjoy behaving in inhuman ways. She remembers a Czechoslovakian refugee who fled to Antigua from Europe to escape Hitler. Although he was just a dentist, he set himself up... (full context)
Slavery, Colonialism, and Independence Theme Icon
Racism and White Supremacy Theme Icon
Rot and Corruption  Theme Icon
...Later, she learned that the royal family dispatched this princess on a tour that included Antigua to get over a failed romance. The contrast between this mundane, everyday heartbreak and the... (full context)
Chapter 3 
Slavery, Colonialism, and Independence Theme Icon
Racism and White Supremacy Theme Icon
Tourism and Empathy  Theme Icon
The Local and The Global Theme Icon
Rot and Corruption  Theme Icon
One day while visiting Antigua, Kincaid stands in the street in and looks around herself and asks if Antigua is... (full context)
Slavery, Colonialism, and Independence Theme Icon
Racism and White Supremacy Theme Icon
Tourism and Empathy  Theme Icon
Rot and Corruption  Theme Icon
...not to make the new one more useable. The Mill Reef residents love the old Antigua, just like Kincaid—but they have very different “old” Antiguas in mind. (full context)
Slavery, Colonialism, and Independence Theme Icon
Racism and White Supremacy Theme Icon
Rot and Corruption  Theme Icon
...of the building—which now houses a carnival troupe—inspires her to consider the state of post-independence Antigua and ask why Mill Reef Club residents should have such a say over the library’s... (full context)
Slavery, Colonialism, and Independence Theme Icon
Racism and White Supremacy Theme Icon
Rot and Corruption  Theme Icon
...Redonda is a distant, barren island that the English included in the colony—and then nation—of Antigua along with Barbuda. The Condrington family, which exploited and sold enslaved persons, originally settled Barbuda.... (full context)
Slavery, Colonialism, and Independence Theme Icon
Racism and White Supremacy Theme Icon
The Local and The Global Theme Icon
In a small place like Antigua, Kincaid explains, even small events become larger than life, oppressive and overly determinant of the... (full context)
Slavery, Colonialism, and Independence Theme Icon
Racism and White Supremacy Theme Icon
Tourism and Empathy  Theme Icon
Rot and Corruption  Theme Icon
...sees this absence of the bigger picture and fluid sense of time in the way Antiguans talk about slavery as a series of bad things that ended with emancipation. They talk... (full context)
Slavery, Colonialism, and Independence Theme Icon
Racism and White Supremacy Theme Icon
Tourism and Empathy  Theme Icon
The Local and The Global Theme Icon
Rot and Corruption  Theme Icon
...notes the way the government accepts bribes to allow American mobsters to run casinos on Antigua, since all West Indian countries seem to want casinos. The government helped circumvent the United... (full context)
Slavery, Colonialism, and Independence Theme Icon
Racism and White Supremacy Theme Icon
Rot and Corruption  Theme Icon
Murders go unsolved in Antigua. A government minister investigating his colleagues for financial mismanagement died, electrocuted trying to open his... (full context)
Slavery, Colonialism, and Independence Theme Icon
Racism and White Supremacy Theme Icon
Rot and Corruption  Theme Icon
Kincaid relates an important event in the history of Antigua, the founding of the Antigua Trades and Labour Union in 1939. Eventually, it became a... (full context)
Rot and Corruption  Theme Icon
...nearby bakery, and tossed them into the oven to be consumed by flames. People in Antigua connect this event to his elbowing out the original, honest leaders of the Antigua Trades... (full context)
The Local and The Global Theme Icon
Rot and Corruption  Theme Icon
...life of power before he died and his son, “Baby Doc,” succeeded him. But perhaps Antigua will be spared this event, Antiguans say—one of Bird’s sons has no apparent desire to... (full context)
Chapter 4
Slavery, Colonialism, and Independence Theme Icon
Racism and White Supremacy Theme Icon
Tourism and Empathy  Theme Icon
The Local and The Global Theme Icon
Antigua’s exceptional beauty seems impossible. No real sunsets could be that beautiful; no real sea or... (full context)
Slavery, Colonialism, and Independence Theme Icon
Racism and White Supremacy Theme Icon
Tourism and Empathy  Theme Icon
The Local and The Global Theme Icon
Rot and Corruption  Theme Icon
Antigua is a small place, just nine miles wide by twelve miles long. Christopher Columbus stumbled... (full context)