Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2024

Bøker i Cambridge Studies on the African Diaspora-serien

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  • - Race, Labor, and Empire in the Twentieth-Century Caribbean, 1898-1948
    av Jorge L. (University of Puerto Rico) Giovannetti-Torres
    470 - 1 324,-

    This book provides a detailed analysis of Afro-Caribbean experiences in Cuba from 1898 to 1948. Paying particular attention to labor, race, politics, and imperial relations, Jorge L. Giovannetti-Torres weaves together a complex story of transnationalism in the African Diaspora.

  • - Unfree Labor in New Orleans during the Age of Revolutions
    av New Hampshire) Johnson & Rashauna (Dartmouth College
    443 - 706,-

    Slavery's Metropolis examines the paradoxes of slave life in New Orleans, a cosmopolitan port city located at the crossroads of early America and the Atlantic World. Its vivid stories will appeal to a broad readership, while its theoretical and methodological contributions will appeal to historians and other scholars.

  • av Houston) Domingues da Silva & Daniel B. (Rice University
    470 - 1 282,-

    This book traces the origins of Africans forced into the Atlantic from West Central Africa during the peak period of the transatlantic slave trade. Richly adorned with tables, figures, and vivid quotations, it will appeal to scholars of Africa and the African Diaspora, graduate students, and genealogists.

  • - A History of the African Diaspora
    av Michael A. (New York University) Gomez
    408 - 1 159,-

    This 2005 book examines the global unfolding of the African Diaspora, the migrations and dispersals of the people of Africa, from antiquity to the modern period. The experiences of Africans in the Old World is followed by their experience in lands claimed by European colonial powers.

  • - Collective Action in the African Diaspora
    av Crystal Nicole (University of North Carolina Eddins
    391,-

    The first scholar to focus on collective consciousness and resistance to enslavement before the Haitian Revolution, Eddins makes a major contribution to African Diaspora studies, sociology, history, and Latin American and Caribbean studies. This readable, theoretically grounded book provides essential context to understand the Haitian Revolution.

  • av Ana Lucia Araujo
    415,-

    "The Gift tells the story of one silver ceremonial sword offered as a gift by French traders to an African agent, and reveals how prestigious gifts shaped the trade of enslaved Africans. This compelling account will interest historians of slavery and material culture"--

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