Classroom lesson · Festival · 🇦🇬 Antigua and Barbuda

Antigua Carnival

A summer explosion of colour, music, and community celebration

Carnival participants in colourful costumes parading through the streets of Antigua

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Antigua Carnival is a ten-day celebration held every July and August that turns the whole island into a giant outdoor festival. There are costume parades, soca and calypso competitions, steel-band performances, street parties, and the famous 'J'ouvert' morning jump-up at dawn. It is the most colourful and energetic event of the Antiguan year.

Tell me more

Carnival in Antigua celebrates freedom, creativity, and community. Masquerade troupes spend months designing and making elaborate costumes covered in feathers, sequins, and bright fabric. Each troupe picks a theme for their costume, and on parade day they dance through the streets in formation, performing to the crowds who line every pavement.

J'ouvert (say 'joo-vay') is the dawn opening of Carnival, when people take to the streets just before sunrise covered in mud, paint, or coloured powder and dance to the booming soca music from trucks loaded with giant speaker stacks. It is joyful and exuberant - a way of welcoming in the Carnival spirit.

The competitions are a huge part of Carnival's identity. The Calypso Monarch competition rewards the cleverest and most entertaining calypso singer. The Road March crowns the soca song that made the most people dance during the parade. Costumed bands compete for the best costume presentation. Winning any of these titles is a major honour.

Antiguan children grow up looking forward to Carnival all year. Schools sometimes have their own junior carnival events, and families spend Carnival together watching, dancing, and celebrating. Many Antiguans who live abroad fly home especially for Carnival - it is the event that makes the island feel most like itself.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Carnival is a celebration that the whole community prepares for together, months in advance. What big celebration does your community prepare for - and how do you get ready for it?
  2. 02Carnival costumes are made by hand over many months. What does that process tell you about how much the event means to the people who take part?
  3. 03J'ouvert starts at dawn - the very beginning of a new day. Why might beginning a celebration at sunrise feel special?
Try this

Classroom activity

Design a Carnival costume for yourself based on a theme you choose (animals, the ocean, the rainforest, space, etc.). Draw the front and back views and label the colours and materials you would use. Then write a two-sentence description of your costume as it might appear in the Carnival programme.