“Timely and timeless, Johnson's elegant writing carries us into the Belizean forest, literally and metaphorically. Showing how culture and nature are mutually constitutive, this intimate work is by far the best portrayal of the complexities of race in Belize, and sheds new light on the entire Atlantic world.”
~Richard Wilk, distinguished professor emeritus, Indiana University
“Beyond the Belize known by outsiders for its beautiful coral reefs and jungle ecotourism, anthropologist Melissa Johnson immerses us in the rural Creole experience of human-environmental relations. Employing her skills as an ethnographer, combined with engaging family stories gathered over several decades, she reveals how local skills, knowledge, concepts, and lifeways of the interior villages are crucial to the ways that Belizeans creatively engage with the more-than-human agentic powers of this co-produced world. Becoming Creole is a close study of rural socio-natural entanglements and an important contribution to both rural studies and Caribbean studies.”
~Mimi Sheller, author of Consuming the Caribbean: From Arawaks to Zombies
"Recommended."
~Choice
~New Books Network - New Books in Caribbean Studies
"Becoming Creole is a welcome addition to scholarship on the role of the other-than-human world in shaping individual identities. It reflects on emergence, connection, race, and transnationality in ways that are often either missing from existing scholarship or that are otherwise underdeveloped. Although subtitled Nature and Race in Belize, neither nature nor race are ever clearly defined in a way that would force them into fixed categories, instead allowing their meaning to develop and change alongside the stories being told, and Belize is never the lone or privileged backdrop on which identity construction occurs. This is a goal to which more scholars should aspire."
~AAG Review
"The book [is] most engaging in discussions of the patchy records of the historical, economic, and cultural geography of Belize."
~The Journal of Latin American Geography
"[An] interesting ethnographic finding in Johnson’s data on Creole language is its creative use to generate metaphors of otherness, and its borrowing from Creole perceptions of the natural world."
~The Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology