Slave Subjectivities in the Iberian Worlds: (16th-20th centuries)
Ângela Barreto Xavier, Cristina Nogueira da Silva, Michel Cahenen Limba Engleză Paperback – 19 dec 2024
Contributors are: Magdalena Candioti, Robson Pedroso Costa, Rômulo da Silva Ehalt, James Fujitani, Michel Kabalan, Silvia Lara, Marta Macedo, Hebe Mattos, Michelle McKinley, Sophia Blea Nuñez, Fernanda Pinheiro, João José Reis, Patricia Faria de Souza, Lisa Surwillo, Miguel Valerio and Lisa Voigt.
Preț: 324.99 lei
Nou
Puncte Express: 487
Preț estimativ în valută:
62.19€ • 65.22$ • 51.86£
62.19€ • 65.22$ • 51.86£
Carte nepublicată încă
Doresc să fiu notificat când acest titlu va fi disponibil:
Se trimite...
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004722569
ISBN-10: 9004722564
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
ISBN-10: 9004722564
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Notă biografică
Ângela Barreto Xavier is a Senior Researcher at the Instituto de Ciências Sociais da Universidade de Lisboa. She has widely published on issues relating with questions of power and domination and the agency and subjectivities of subaltern people in the context of the Portuguese early-modern empire.
Cristina Nogueira da Silva is Professor at the Law School of Universidade Nova de Lisboa and researcher at its research center, CEDIS. Her main research areas are classical liberalism and citizenship in the nineteenth century, the history of the legal personal status in the Portuguese overseas territories, as well as the way legal concepts and institutions were used by enslaved and free subaltern people in the context of the Portuguese contemporary empire.
Michel Cahen is a political historian of modern colonial Portugal and contemporary Portuguese-speaking Africa. He is emeritus CNRS Senior Researcher at the Centre ‘Les Afriques dans le monde’ (Sciences Po Bordeaux). His main interests relate to Marxism and nationalism, identity and citizenship, political identity at the margins, coloniality and globalisation.
Cristina Nogueira da Silva is Professor at the Law School of Universidade Nova de Lisboa and researcher at its research center, CEDIS. Her main research areas are classical liberalism and citizenship in the nineteenth century, the history of the legal personal status in the Portuguese overseas territories, as well as the way legal concepts and institutions were used by enslaved and free subaltern people in the context of the Portuguese contemporary empire.
Michel Cahen is a political historian of modern colonial Portugal and contemporary Portuguese-speaking Africa. He is emeritus CNRS Senior Researcher at the Centre ‘Les Afriques dans le monde’ (Sciences Po Bordeaux). His main interests relate to Marxism and nationalism, identity and citizenship, political identity at the margins, coloniality and globalisation.
Cuprins
Acknowledgments
List of Figures and Tables
Prologue: Understanding the Voice of the Enslaved in the Iberian World
João José Reis
Introduction: Slave Subjectivities—Studying Absences?
Ângela Barreto Xavier, Cristina Nogueira da Silva, and Michel Cahen
1 ‘Where All Yndios Are Free’
Identity, Resistance, and Dissonant Perceptions about the Enslavement of Japanese in the Iberian World (16th–17th Centuries)
Rômulo da Silva Ehalt
2 The Concubine Slaves of the Portuguese in the China Sea Region
James Fujitani
3 From Asia to Lisbon
Fragments of Lives and Subjectivities of the Enslaved (16th–17th Centuries)
Patricia Souza de Faria
4 Work and Identity in the Case of Elena/o de Céspedes
Sophia Blea Nuñez
5 “Pública Notícia”
Black Brotherhoods and Corporate Subjectivity in Eighteenth-Century Brazil
Lisa Voigt
6 Creolizing Death
Afro-Catholic Deathways in the Early Modern Iberian World
Miguel A. Valerio
7 Black Masters
A Study on Slave-Owning Slaves, 1790–1850, Pernambuco, Brazil
Robson Pedrosa Costa
8 The Qurʾan in My Notebook
Slavery, Revolt and the Teaching of Arabic in the 1830s Bahia, Brazil
Michel Kabalan
9 Central African Echoes in the Wilds of Pernambuco, Brazil, in the Second Half of the Seventeenth Century)
Silvia Hunold Lara
10 Henrique Dias and the Portuguese Empire: Narrative, Subjectivity and Memory
Hebe Mattos
11 Against ‘Unjust Captivity’
Lisbon’s Brotherhoods of Black and ‘Pardo’ Men’s Litigious Action and the Struggle for the End of Slavery in the Kingdom of Portugal
Fernanda Domingos Pinheiro
12 Negotiating Emancipation and Social Mobility
Crosscrossed Biographies of Africans and Afrodescendants in the Río de la Plata (1810–1840)
Magdalena Candioti
13 Petitioning from the Body: Cuba and Spain in 1873
Lisa Surwillo
14 Displacement, Work and Confinement: Plantation Workers in São Tomé
Marta Macedo
Postface: Enslavement, Race, Liberty and Emotion
Michelle A. McKinley
Index
List of Figures and Tables
Prologue: Understanding the Voice of the Enslaved in the Iberian World
João José Reis
Introduction: Slave Subjectivities—Studying Absences?
Ângela Barreto Xavier, Cristina Nogueira da Silva, and Michel Cahen
Part 1: Slave Subjectivities in Asia
1 ‘Where All Yndios Are Free’
Identity, Resistance, and Dissonant Perceptions about the Enslavement of Japanese in the Iberian World (16th–17th Centuries)
Rômulo da Silva Ehalt
2 The Concubine Slaves of the Portuguese in the China Sea Region
James Fujitani
3 From Asia to Lisbon
Fragments of Lives and Subjectivities of the Enslaved (16th–17th Centuries)
Patricia Souza de Faria
Part 2: Subjectivities in the Context of Labour and Religion
4 Work and Identity in the Case of Elena/o de Céspedes
Sophia Blea Nuñez
5 “Pública Notícia”
Black Brotherhoods and Corporate Subjectivity in Eighteenth-Century Brazil
Lisa Voigt
6 Creolizing Death
Afro-Catholic Deathways in the Early Modern Iberian World
Miguel A. Valerio
7 Black Masters
A Study on Slave-Owning Slaves, 1790–1850, Pernambuco, Brazil
Robson Pedrosa Costa
8 The Qurʾan in My Notebook
Slavery, Revolt and the Teaching of Arabic in the 1830s Bahia, Brazil
Michel Kabalan
Part 3: Social Mobility and Emancipation
9 Central African Echoes in the Wilds of Pernambuco, Brazil, in the Second Half of the Seventeenth Century)
Silvia Hunold Lara
10 Henrique Dias and the Portuguese Empire: Narrative, Subjectivity and Memory
Hebe Mattos
11 Against ‘Unjust Captivity’
Lisbon’s Brotherhoods of Black and ‘Pardo’ Men’s Litigious Action and the Struggle for the End of Slavery in the Kingdom of Portugal
Fernanda Domingos Pinheiro
12 Negotiating Emancipation and Social Mobility
Crosscrossed Biographies of Africans and Afrodescendants in the Río de la Plata (1810–1840)
Magdalena Candioti
13 Petitioning from the Body: Cuba and Spain in 1873
Lisa Surwillo
14 Displacement, Work and Confinement: Plantation Workers in São Tomé
Marta Macedo
Postface: Enslavement, Race, Liberty and Emotion
Michelle A. McKinley
Index