Everyday Apocalypses: Debt and Dystopia in Nicole Dennis-Benn’s Here Comes the Sun
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Girvan concedes that “most of us are not likely to view our condition in such apocalyptic terms”, with “governments and opinion-makers” tending to see “each such phenomena as disconnected events” requiring a specific form of crisis management. However, crisis management, he argues, “is not a condition that lends itself to strategic thinking”; and “isn’t strategic thinking, that attempts to discern the connections among seemingly unrelated phenomena, not what is required? Indeed is it not a necessity for survival?” (Girvan 2010). Thinking apocalyptically, Girvan thus seems to suggest, can be a form of strategic thinking, one necessary if the existential threats to the Caribbean are to be properly understood.When you combine acute climate change-related stress of this kind with (a) the acute economic stress arising out of erosion of trade preferences and the failure to develop a new “insertion” into the global economy, (b) fiscal stress due to unsustainable debt burdens and the impact of the global economic crisis; and (c) the seeming incapacity of governments to control the impact of transnational crime; one must wonder if we are not in fact experiencing an overlapping and interconnected series of challenges which in their totality, challenge the assumptions underlying the ‘national statehood’ dispensation of the region. Suppose, in other words, that we are not dealing simply with a series of ‘natural disasters’, but rather with a deeper, more systemic threat to the viability of our societies as functional entities in any meaningful sense of the word?
2. The Apocalypse of the Everyday
Brathwaite’s understanding of slavery and the Middle Passage as an apocalyptic explosion that continues to reverberate in the present is complimented by those critics who, drawing on the work of the Plantation School of Caribbean economists (notably Lloyd Best, Kari Levitt, and George Beckford), highlight the ongoing centrality of the exploitative logics of the colonial plantation system to contemporary societies in the Caribbean and beyond. Typically, for such critics, the plantation is not simply a mode of agriculture or economic institution; it is also a socio-political formation combining intensive ecological extraction, specifically racialized and gendered forms of social domination, and precociously modern forms of management, governance, and finance (Manjapra 2018, p. 363). This model of plantation economy was honed in the Caribbean from the 1500s to the 1700s and then exported across the globe, with the result that, despite major transformations in the world economy, there today exists an “interlinked global plantation political economy” that “continue[s] to extract institutional rents using taxation, infrastructure, environmental, social, and other policies that rigidly control labour, race, ethnic, urban, and rural relations” (Woods 2007, p. 57). As Katherine McKittrick puts it: in “agriculture, banking, and mining, in trade and tourism, and across other colonial and postcolonial spaces—the prison, the city, the resort—a plantation logic characteristic of (but not identical to) slavery emerges in the present both ideologically and materially” (McKittrick 2013, p. 3). The present, in other words, is littered with the debris of plantation history.My position on catastrophe […] is, I’m so conscious of the enormity of slavery and the Middle Passage and I see that as an ongoing catastrophe. So whatever happens in the world after that, like tsunamis in the Far East and India and Indonesia, and 9/11, and now New Orleans, to me these are all aspects of that same original explosion, which I try constantly to understand.
Here, we see the affective labor required of Margot to project an exoticized fantasy of service for the tourist to consume. The mask of subservience she dons recalls Derek Walcott’s description of the “rictus of a smile” that characterizes how, “from shame of necessity”, the Caribbean islands “sell themselves” in “tourist brochures” (Walcott 1998, p. 81). Simultaneously, it is a reminder of Fanon’s account in Black Skin, White Masks of the way in which the colonizer demanded of the Black subject “service with a smile, every time”—a demand underwritten by fear and force (Fanon 1986, p. 35).She smiles at him—it’s a slow, easy smile; her first real one all day. Her job entails a conscious movement of the jaw, a curve of the mouth to reveal teeth, all teeth—a distraction from the eyes, which never hold the same enthusiasm, but are practiced all the same to maintain eye contact with guests. “It’s a wonderful day at Palm Star Resort, how may I help you?” “Good morning, sir”. “Yes, ma’am, let me get that for you”. “No, sir, we don’t offer a direct shuttle to Kingston, but there’s one to Ocho Rios”. “May I help you with anything else, ma’am?” “Your shuttle is outside waiting on you, sir”. “You have a good day, now. I’m here if you need anything. No problem”.
She sways high above Horace [one of Margot’s foreign clients] like a palm tree in a cool breeze […] She rocks and sways, aware of the creeping chaos, the sensation that spreads from her groin all the way to his curled toes as though her orgasm had possessed his body too. When it’s all over, Margot spirals down and down, crashing like a big tree uprooted by nature’s merciless ax. She lies next to Horace, postcoital disgust and a lurking disappointment coiling in her belly like days-old milk.(p. 60)
The first passage draws attention once again to sex tourism’s reliance on exoticizing fantasies of the Caribbean and its peoples, with Margot resembling the tourist brochure trope of a palm tree swaying in the breeze as she sits astride Horace. The description of her orgasm as a “creeping chaos” spreading down through her body to invade and possess Horace’s is echoed in the description in the second passage of the hotels advancing “like a dark sea” along the coastline, invading and possessing the land. That Margot feels she is possessing Horace suggests a temporary reversal of power relations and underscores the sense of agency she acquires through her sex work. Ultimately, however, she finds herself “uprooted” like a tree under “nature’s merciless ax” and plagued by self-disgust. There are parallels here with the way the hotels appearing on the coastline promise economic development and prosperity but, instead, devastate the landscape and uproot communities. Indeed, the nature of the “long forgotten” Little Bay’s disappearance—its being effectively wiped from the map and erased from cultural memory—indicates the apocalyptic quality of tourism’s transformation of local environments.The hotels are building along the coastlines. Slowly but surely they are coming, like a dark sea. Little Bay, which used to be two towns over from River Bank, was the first to go. Just five years ago the people of Little Bay left in droves, forced out of their homes and into the streets. […] In the past, developers would wait for landslides and other natural disasters to do their dirty work. But when tourism became the bread and butter for the island’s economy, the developers and the government alike became ravenous, indifferent. In retaliation, people stole concrete blocks and cement and zinc from the new developments to rebuild homes in other places, but their pilfering brought soldiers with rifles and tear gas. The developers won the fight, and the people scattered like roaches. […] It was as though their own land had turned on them—swallowed up their homes and livestock and produce and spat out the remains. By the time the workmen arrived in River Bank, Little Bay had been long forgotten.(pp. 120–21)
Here, the image of uprooted trees again calls back to the description of Margot following her sexual encounter with Horace, highlighting the entanglement of sexual exploitation, the ecological fallout from land development, and the legacies of plantation slavery. At the same time, the loss of the trunks behind which “the ancestors once hid” is also the loss of the histories of resistance to the plantation regime inscribed within the landscape. The past, then, is under threat of erasure except insofar as it subsists as the haunting specter of colonial violence, while the future itself has been colonized by the developmental logic of the hotel-plantation. It is in the context of this consequent reduction of experience to a sclerotic present that we can understand the narrative form and structure of Dennis-Benn’s novel more generally while also drawing a fundamental connection to the other type of violence stalking Here Comes the Sun, that of the financial violence of debt.They stand in place like resting mammoths, their blades like curved tusks. It’s as though they landed from the sky or were washed ashore. One by one they begin to knock down trees in the cove and along the river. They also take a chunk of the hill, cutting down the trees that cradle the limestone, which they chip away. Their big engines grind two-thousand-year-old tree trunks—trees the ancestors once hid behind, crouching in search of freedom. […] Bits and pieces of rock scatter as trees are uprooted.(p. 289)
The scene clearly emphasizes tourism’s imbrication in relations of racial domination and sexual exploitation. However, it also functions as an allegory of Jamaica’s relationship with the IMF and World Bank, the debt burden imposed on the country, and the violence with which it is entangled. Margot here stands as a figure for Jamaica, particularly Black, working-class Jamaica (a reading strengthened by the frequent conflation of Margot’s body with the island landscape during her sexual encounters with tourists). In this particular instance, meanwhile, Delores could be said to figure something like the national bourgeoisie, or at least those comprador elites who, in the aftermath of independence, sought to “exclude the masses from effective power” while serving as local agents for foreign capital (Thomas 1988, p. 72). Margot’s (Jamaica’s) future is mortgaged or sold off by Delores for an advance of money in the present, a transaction that does long-term damage to her selfhood (just as the IMF’s neoliberal restructuring of Jamaica has done long-term damage to the country’s productive economy). Indeed, Margot’s encounter with the tourist locks her into a treadmill of sexual exploitation that recalls the way the IMF loans to Jamaica locked the island into a “borrowing treadmill” (Weis 2004, p. 466). Finally, just as the money earned from tourism tends not to remain in the Caribbean, so the money Delores earns from prostituting Margot does not bring the financial security she hopes for since it is stolen by her brother, who promptly disappears to the US.One day a tall, dark-haired man walked into Delores’s stall. He was wearing sunglasses, like most tourists. He had a presence about him, an air Delores associated with important people—white people. […] The man pulled out a wad of cash and began to count it in front of Delores. Delores watched him count six hundred-dollar bills. She had never seen so much money in her life. The crispness of the bills and the scent of newness, which Delores thought was what wealth must smell like—the possibility of moving her family out of River Bank, affording her daughter’s school fee, books, and uniforms, buying a telephone and a landline for her to call people whenever she liked instead of waiting to use the neighbour’s phone—all these possibilities were too much to swallow all at once. ‘Sah—but she—she’s only fourteen’. ‘I’m staying right down there’. He gestured to the large cruise ship, which was in plain sight. ‘I’ll have her back before dinner’.(pp. 201–2)
The sense of indebtedness Thandi is made to feel towards her mother and sister weighs on her like a financial debt weighs on a country, and like such financial debts, the bitter irony is that the debt only perpetuates the problem it was meant to solve. Delores’s and Margot’s cold-eyed determination to do whatever it takes to ensure a more secure future does not break the cycle of violence in which they are trapped but merely perpetuates it: by the end of the novel, as a result of her actions, Margot has to watch Thandi replicate the transactional sexual relationship with Alphonso that has scarred her own existence. Here Comes the Sun thus implicitly draws the connection between the intergenerational trauma of sexual abuse and the intergenerational violence of Jamaica’s ongoing debt burden.‘Thandi, all these years we’ve been sending you to school, and you’re wasting time and paper on ah lousy art project and disappearing to do god knows what? Do you know how much ah sacrifice!’Thandi clamps her hands over her ears and shakes her head. ‘Just stop! I don’t want to hear this speech’.(p. 132)
Significantly, Grandma Merle and Miss Violet would presumably be of the generation that came of age during the anticolonial struggles of the 1960s. The fact that they both appear to be stuck in time, unable to move beyond a moment of trauma, gestures to the contemporary sense of the Caribbean present as, in Scott’s words, “stricken with immobility” following “the collapse of the social and political hopes” of the independence era, a collapse that was at least in part hastened by the impact of debt colonialism in the region.The date—though currently 1 June 1994—is still 7 August 1988, according to the water-stained calendar hanging on a wall. Inside this house, Hurricane Gilbert has not yet come and devastated the island, flooding out some residents of River Bank. Inside this house, Edward Seaga is still Prime Minister of Jamaica, a yellowing picture of him pasted next to the calendar. Inside this house, a fisherman name Asafa still brings home lobster for his family.(p. 225)
The promised sun has come, as it were: Margot has attained the supposedly better life for which she sacrificed so much. However, there is no sense of fulfillment or hope for the future here; instead, we confront a perpetuation of the logics of social death that structure the plantation-hotel. If the latter is, to recall Rodriques’s description, a “fantastical but very real world, in which Black humanity must be negated for tourism”, then Margot has ironically imprisoned herself in an analogous space: surrounded by the phantasmagoria of commodities she has purchased to fill her empty villa, she herself appears as a kind of phantom, a being leeched of life—nothing but a “grainy figure”, a shadow on the surface of the water. The latter, moreover, functions as a mirror of the ecocidal logic of the plantation-hotel complex: the water in the pool is, we discover, being extracted from the sea in a manner that evokes the tourism industry’s catastrophic exploitation of water resources in the Caribbean (Pattullo 1996, p. 41), while also conjuring the specter of climate breakdown in the form of rising sea-levels. The novel thus ends on a vision of everyday apocalypse: individuals consigned to social death, communities uprooted and dispersed, ecosystems disrupted and degraded, and the future foreclosed.As Margot stands on the pool terrace, the sun, which hasn’t shown itself in days, makes its way from behind the soft, dove-gray clouds, bright and unflinching. The rectangular pool shimmers before Margot. Everything glitters in the new sunlight, just like Margot had always thought it would. Except for her lone, grainy figure on the water’s surface, dark in the face of the sun.(p. 345)
3. Against Spectralization
Throughout Here Comes the Sun, Brand’s “spectre of captivity” cleaves to Margot’s body, from her performance of servility at the hotel’s front desk to her final isolation in her villa. Indeed, the spectral image of Margot on which the novel concludes emphasizes how the existential threats now confronting the Caribbean have their roots in the ongoing catastrophe of slavery, the Middle Passage, and the plantation system.those leaping bodies, those prostrate bodies, those bodies made to dance and then to work, those bodies curdling under the singing of whips, those bodies cursed, those bodies valued, those bodies remain curved in these attitudes. They remain fixed in the ether of history. They leap onto the backs of the contemporary—they cleave not only to the collective and acquired memories of their descendants but also to the collective and acquired memories of the other.(2023, p. 37)
Thandi’s efforts to bleach her skin to avoid, as she puts it, the “ugliness of being black and poor” (p. 229) turn her into the embodiment of the haunting history of slavery’s branding of the flesh. Her body becomes the site of everyday apocalypse, not only manifesting the ongoing impact of colonialism’s racist hierarchies but also—insofar as Thandi is toxifying her skin with the application of the bleaching chemicals—gesturing to the general toxification of the environment, from coral bleaching to polluted waterways, that is the effect of mass tourism in the Caribbean.With one hand Delores rips the flimsy nightgown off Thandi to bare her chest so that she can see her bleached body in its entirety—everywhere as light as the cedar planks that Clover uses to patch holes in the shack. Gone is Thandi’s once-mahogany cocoa skin. Delores jumps back, her hands flying to her mouth as if a ghost—a duppy—snatched her breath, her eyes watering.(p. 232)
This scene is, of course, freighted with tragic pathos, as Charles confronts Thandi’s alienation from her body and the impact of racist hierarchies on her self-perception. Yet, Thandi’s body remains a tangible presence here; it refuses spectralization, straining to burst through the Saran Wrap that encases it as part of the bleaching process (with the Wrap manifesting yet another specter of captivity insofar as Thandi resembles a shrink-wrapped commodity in a supermarket). Thandi’s desire for physical connection with Charles resonates with Valencia’s call to “re-ontologize the body” in resistance to the practices and discourses that derealize it or, to put it another way, condemn it to social death. Despite how this scene concludes, the “flame glows inside her still”, and by the novel’s end, Thandi has begun to overcome her self-alienation.There is something urgent building inside her. She doesn’t know where it rises from—this occasional burst of fire inside her chest. She goes over to where Charles sits and stoops before him. Charles remains silent as though he knows her mission and has agreed to be her accomplice. To leap into the fire. She brings her face to his and their lips touch.She unbuttons her shirt for him. One by one the buttons slide from the holes. The bleached turpentine hue of her chest, smooth with the elevated roundness of her breasts, which are small and full, tapering off at nipples the shade of tamarind pods. Charles stares at her breasts wrapped like HTB Easter Buns in the Saran Wrap plastic. He regards them for what seems like a long time, as though trying to convince himself of something. […] She waits for him to do something, anything. To rip the plastic off so that she can finally breathe, to put his mouth to the small opening in her nipples where she hopes milk will flow someday for a child. All she needs is release. But it’s his silence that grows, shaming her. He contemplates her with the compassion of a priest. She feels herself shrinking under his assessment of her. “Put yuh clothes back on”, he says. “Why?” “Jus’ put it back on”. […] Thandi buttons her blouse, her back to Charles; and the flame glows inside her still.(pp. 186–87)
Thandi’s drawings are the antithesis of the mediatized images and derealizing tropes of the Caribbean promulgated by the tourism industry. Serving aesthetically to re-ontologize the body, they celebrate the textures and intensities of everyday life in Thandi’s village. In a novel distinguished, as we have seen, by its registration of the reduction of experience to a stalled present, with cultural memory eroded and the future foreclosed, Thandi’s portraits restore a sense of historicity, of agency—“dem life story”—to her subjects. Unsurprisingly, Thandi’s artistic aspirations are dismissed by Delores and Margot, both of whom consider such work a waste of time and effort: from their instrumentalist perspective, anything that is not going to help Thandi ascend socially is valueless. That Thandi persists with her art as a source of pleasure, an end in itself, underscores her ultimate resistance to the dominant social logics that consign her sister to a lonely, discorporate existence. Here Comes the Sun, then, offers an exemplary demonstration of a literary form of (everyday) apocalyptic thinking that, in Girvan’s terms, effects a kind of strategic thinking capable of articulating the intersection of economic, social, political, and ecological crises in the Caribbean. At the same time—indeed, perhaps by doing so—it keeps alive the “flame” (to borrow the term used to describe Thandi’s bodily desires) of resistance, the faint, glowing possibility that things might yet be otherwise.Thandi shifts uncomfortably as [Charles] studies each portrait she has painstakingly drawn for her project. He laughs when he recognizes the drawings: a drawing of Miss Gracie clutching her Bible; Mr. Melon walking his goat; […] the women with the buckets on their heads on their way to the river; Miss Francis and Miss Louise combing their daughters’ hair on the veranda; Mr. Levy locking up his shop; Margot hunched over stacks of envelopes on the dining table with her hands clasped and head bowed like she’s praying. She blushes when he gets to a drawing of himself by the river. […] [H]e says, ‘Yuh is di real deal’.‘Yuh think so?’‘One hundred percent,’ he says. ‘I like di drawings of di people. Ah like how yuh mek dem look real’.‘They are real’.‘Yeah, but you give us more. I don’t know if ah making any sense. What’s di fancy word yuh use fah when yuh can see inside ah person an’ know dem life story?’(p. 185)
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1 | On the idea of the apocalypse as something that illuminates the conditions of the present, see Junot Díaz (2011). Writing in the wake of the Haitian earthquake of 2010, in an article significantly titled “Apocalypse—What Disasters Reveal”, Díaz notes that “apocalypse comes to us from the Greek apocalypsis, meaning to uncover and unveil” (2011). Drawing on James Berger’s discussion of the three meanings of apocalypse, Díaz explains that it is, first, “the actual imagined end of the world”; second, it “comprises the catastrophes, personal or historical, that are said to resemble that imagined final ending”; and third, it “is a disruptive event that provokes revelation” (2011). |
2 |
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Niblett, M. Everyday Apocalypses: Debt and Dystopia in Nicole Dennis-Benn’s Here Comes the Sun. Humanities 2025, 14, 105. https://doi.org/10.3390/h14050105
Niblett M. Everyday Apocalypses: Debt and Dystopia in Nicole Dennis-Benn’s Here Comes the Sun. Humanities. 2025; 14(5):105. https://doi.org/10.3390/h14050105
Chicago/Turabian StyleNiblett, Michael. 2025. "Everyday Apocalypses: Debt and Dystopia in Nicole Dennis-Benn’s Here Comes the Sun" Humanities 14, no. 5: 105. https://doi.org/10.3390/h14050105
APA StyleNiblett, M. (2025). Everyday Apocalypses: Debt and Dystopia in Nicole Dennis-Benn’s Here Comes the Sun. Humanities, 14(5), 105. https://doi.org/10.3390/h14050105