Being Yoruba in Nineteenth-Century Rio de Janeiro

被引:2
作者
Graham, Sandra Lauderdale [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Texas Austin, Dept Hist, Austin, TX 78712 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1080/0144039X.2011.538196
中图分类号
K [历史、地理];
学科分类号
06 ;
摘要
Through the experiences of two West Africans shipped to Bahia as slaves, probably in the 1840s, then sold south to Rio de Janeiro where they met, became lovers, bought their freedom, married, and divorced, I comment on an ongoing debate over the refashioning or transfer of African ethnic identities in American slave societies. The sources in this Brazilian case suggest that previous identities were not suddenly erased, but rather, new layers of understanding and ways of responding were added. Whatever the dynamic of cultural formation, it was memory that crucially bridged the distance between the past they carried with them and the present into which they were thrust; and so it becomes illuminating to reconstruct the plausibly remembered African pasts on which this couple drew to make sense of an unfamiliar Brazilian present.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 26
页数:26
相关论文
共 64 条
[1]  
ADEDIRAN B, 1984, REV PROBLEM ETHNIC I, V7, P57
[2]  
AMADIUME I, 1987, MALE DAUGHTERS FEMAL, P28
[3]  
[Anonymous], AFRICAS OGUN OLD WOR
[4]  
BARICKMAN BJ, BAHIAN COUNTERPOINT, P157
[5]  
BARNES ST, 1990, J RELIG AFR, V20, P252
[6]  
Bethell Leslie, 1970, ABOLITION BRAZILIAN, P18
[7]   Social Death and Political Life in the Study of Slavery [J].
Brown, Vincent .
AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW, 2009, 114 (05) :1231-1249
[8]   Marcelina da Silva: A Nineteenth-Century Candomble Priestess in Bahia [J].
Castillo, Lisa Earl ;
Pares, Luis Nicolau .
SLAVERY & ABOLITION, 2010, 31 (01) :1-27
[9]  
CLARKE WH, 1972, TRAVELS EXPLORATIONS, P259
[10]  
DECASTRO HMM, 1995, SILENCIO SIGNIFICADO, P151