Voices of the Enslaved in Nineteenth-Century Cuba: A Documentary History

Voices of the Enslaved in Nineteenth-Century Cuba: A Documentary History

Voices of the Enslaved in Nineteenth-Century Cuba: A Documentary History

Voices of the Enslaved in Nineteenth-Century Cuba: A Documentary History

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Overview

Putting the voices of the enslaved front and center, Gloria Garcia Rodriguez's study presents a compelling overview of African slavery in Cuba and its relationship to the plantation system that was the economic center of the New World. A major essay by Garcia, who has done decades of archival research on Cuban slavery, introduces the work, providing a history of the development, maintenance, and economy of the slave system in Cuba, which was abolished in 1886, later than in any country in the Americas except Brazil. The second part of the book features eighty previously unpublished primary documents selected by Garcia that vividly illustrate the experiences of Cuba's African slaves. This translation offers English-language readers a substantial look into the very rich, and much underutilized, material on slavery in Cuban archives and is especially suitable for teaching about the African diaspora, comparative slavery, and Cuban studies. Highlighting both the repressiveness of slavery and the legal and social spaces opened to slaves to challenge that repression, this collection reveals the rarely documented voices of slaves, as well as the social and cultural milieu in which they lived.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780807871942
Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
Publication date: 10/10/2011
Series: Latin America in Translation/en Traducción/em Tradução
Edition description: 1
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Gloria Garcia Rodriguez, a historian, is a researcher at the Institute of History in Havana. Nancy L. Westrate is an independent scholar who received her Ph.D. in anthropology from Duke University. Ada Ferrer is associate professor of history at New York University and author of Insurgent Cuba: Race, Nation, and Revolution, 1868-1898.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

Pioneering. . . . Garcia is not trying to give us an unmediated voice of the enslaved; she knows that is likely impossible. But she does succeed in laying before us a view of enslavement from within the confines of the plantation, in the process giving us a much fuller and richer picture of the interior world of Cuban slavery than any yet available.—Ada Ferrer, from the foreword

This collection excels at restoring a strong agency to slaves who are sometimes viewed as faceless, supine, downtrodden, and incapable of responding to their servile conditions. Slaves did not just work, riot, and die violent, premature deaths. Garcia beautifully recovers the rich abilities, insights, and collective will of Cuba's slaves through their own words. An invaluable and thorough introduction to a new world slave system.—Franklin W. Knight, The Johns Hopkins University

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