This book focuses on the migrations and metamorphoses of black bodies, practices, and discourses around the Atlantic, particularly with regard to current issues such as questions of identity, political and human rights, cosmopolitics, and mnemo-history.
137 (Tomorrow, when the Muntu awakes with its message and sing in the streets the glorious name of Changó, they will repeat the same mumbo jumbo they threw at the prophet Garvey: “the Worship of Life and Shadows is an irrational ...
Cultural workers such as Harriet Jacobs, W.E.B.Du Bois, Arthur Schomburg, Robert Hayden, and Sherley Anne Williams, to name justa few, have long taughtus to be skeptical of dominant archives.Their work, acrosscenturies, ingenres as ...
In Black Geographies and the Politics of Place, edited by KatherineMcKrittick and ClydeWoods, 1–13. Cambridge, MA: South End Press. Oboe, Annalisa and AnnaScacchi, eds. 2008. Recharting the Black Atlantic: Modern Cultures, ...
Like snapshots of everyday life in the past, the compelling biographies in this book document the making of the Black Atlantic world since the sixteenth century from the point of view of those who were part of it.
Oxford Bibliographies Online covers most subject disciplines within the social science and humanities, for more information visit www.oxfordbibliographies.com.
In a similar vein, he decries that The Coquette “fills the interims of the action with the same sort of sentiment, didacticism, and stuffy analysis of the 'heart' that clogs Richardson's Clarissa” (1948, 16). In such accounts of ...
There is,Paul Gilroy tells us, a culture that is not specifically African, American, Caribbean, or British, but all of these at once, a black Atlantic culture whose themes and techniques transcend ethnicity and nationality to produce ...
Antoinette Tidjani Alou, “Marine Origins and Anti-Marine Tropism in the French Caribbean,” in Recharting the Black Atlantic: Modern Cultures, Local Communities, Global Connections, editors, Annalisa Oboe ...
American Literary History 21.3 (2009): 431–463. Mackenthun, Gesa. Fictions of the Black Atlantic in American Foundational Literature. London: Routledge, 2004. Mamigonian, Beatriz G., and Karen Racine. The Human Tradition in the Black ...
One could compare with this Serote¶s accusation that 3the world has forgotten ́ in his Index on Censorship interview with Jane Wilkinson (106), and with Yao¶s words that 3when we love we cannot forget ́ (To Every Birth 357).