Guide to Kingston Jamaica
  • Welcome
  • Where to Stay
    • Neita's Nest
    • Reggae Hostel
    • Altamont Court Hotel
    • Courtleigh Hotel
    • Marriott
    • Hotel Four Seasons
    • Jamaica Pegasus
    • Knutsford Court Hotel
    • Liguanea Club
    • Spanish Court Hotel
    • Terra Nova All Suite Hotel
  • Things to Do
    • Kingston Tours
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    • Kingston Art
    • Request an Itinerary
  • Where to Eat
  • Getting Around
  • Safety
  • Visitor Tips
  • Calendar of Events
  • Blog
  • About Us
  • Welcome
  • Where to Stay
    • Neita's Nest
    • Reggae Hostel
    • Altamont Court Hotel
    • Courtleigh Hotel
    • Marriott
    • Hotel Four Seasons
    • Jamaica Pegasus
    • Knutsford Court Hotel
    • Liguanea Club
    • Spanish Court Hotel
    • Terra Nova All Suite Hotel
  • Things to Do
    • Kingston Tours
    • Kingston Attractions
    • Kingston Art
    • Request an Itinerary
  • Where to Eat
  • Getting Around
  • Safety
  • Visitor Tips
  • Calendar of Events
  • Blog
  • About Us
Guide to Kingston Jamaica

KINGSTON JAMAICA TRAVEL, ​THE KINGSTON EXPERTS

New Production "Dennis Scott's Dog" Opens on Oct 21

10/19/2016

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It's no secret that Jamaica has had many challenges throughout its history relating to race and class. In the play "Dog" by the late Dennis Scott, there is a symbolic representation of the resulting violence in the 1970s. According to Kwame Dawes:

​The effectiveness of Scott's symbolic play lies in the manner in which he parallels the social conditions of the Jamaican society at the time of his writing the piece. In the late 70s and early 80s hundreds of Jamaicans were dying each year as a result of political and "criminal" violence. The criminal activity was moving further and further away from the ghetto areas of the city and spreading into the suburban foothills where the middle-class Jamaican lived. Crime, while being sponsored in many ways by politicians, was assuming the face of class warfare for the criminals were invariably poor blacks, and the victims who were attacked in the foothills were lighter skinned middle and upper class Jamaicans. Of course, more working class people were killed by political violence than were middle and upper class Jamaicans, but the national panic did not set in until the ruling class felt in some way threatened. (From "Politics and Violence in Dennis Scott's Dog: A Study in Political Pessimism" by Kwame Dawes)

​In the play we have humans at war with packs of dogs, both groups fearful and bent on the destruction of the other. This social commentary on the divisions in Jamaica is an interesting one and is recommended viewing.

​The play is being mounted at the Edna Manley College with direction provided by Trevor Nairne (see poster above for more details). If you see it, please post a comment and tell us what you think.
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Peter Tosh Museum Opens Oct 19

10/19/2016

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Below is an extract from a Jamaica Observer article. The full article can be found here.


Prime Minister Andrew Holness will be the guest speaker at the official opening today of the Peter Tosh Museum at the Pulse Centre, Trafalgar Road, St Andrew. The museum is opening its doors on the 72nd anniversary of Tosh’s birth, and five weeks after the 29th anniversary of his murder at the hands of robbers at his home in Barbican.

According to the chairman of Pulse, Kingsley Cooper, when the museum officially opens its doors, Jamaicans and visitors from around the world will be able to see a large collection of never-before-seen Tosh memorabilia.

​Continue reading.
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Garvey Musical Oct 13 - 17 

10/10/2016

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Just in time for Heroes Weekend comes a musical that focuses on Marcus Garvey. Marcus Garvey is Jamaica's first national hero and one of the most influential Jamaicans. His thoughts, philosophies and principles have influenced many groups including Rastas, Africans, and African Americans. The Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) which he started in 1914 had at its height approximately 6 million followers across the globe in the early 20th century. The UNIA focused on black activism and black culture, including theatre.

​Marcus Garvey supported the theatre arts, and he himself wrote a play called "In a Dialogue: What's the Difference". He would therefore most likely be supportive of this venture from director Michael Holgate at the Phillip Sherlock Centre for the Creative Arts at the University of the West Indies. We too are excited. to see it

​See the show times in the poster above.
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    Kingston!

    Go, see, explore Kingston, Jamaica. Blog Editor, Karen Hutchinson, will inform you on the best the city has to offer.

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