The object of this study is to analyze the use and adaptation of racialist ideology in the Afro-Hispanic Antilles following the start of the Revolution of Saint-Domingue in 1791, as it evolved to justify and reinforce plantation slavery and served to reinstitute and police the color line that was the central ideological premise supporting the economy of exchange and exploitation in the world of Atlantic coloniality. The renewed stigmatization of the racialized types in Creole population aimed to limit the echoes of the revolution against the plantation and it was an attempt to dismiss its political significance as a movement of self-emancipation and decolonization. The fear promoted by the colonial authorities, the planter class and Creole ...
This study is about how ideology was used to create a nefarious cultural representation of Africans ...
This dissertation explores the links between violence, race, and honor in French Saint Domingue (Hai...
How did Africans imagine the future of the Caribbean slave societies where they lived? In an extraor...
The object of this study is to analyze the use and adaptation of racialist ideology in the Afro-Hisp...
The Haitian Revolution is often overlooked in Historical analysis, but had far reaching effects. Th...
This dissertation examines the ways that slaves and free blacks participated in and shaped the Bourb...
Using two Atlantic World events— the Haitian Revolution and Nat Turner’s Rebellion— as temporal boo...
In the late 18th century appeared in France a group of enlightened philanthropists who promoted the ...
The Fear of French Negroes is an interdisciplinary study that explores how people of African descent...
Focussing on the early nineteenth century, this article examines the ways in which white slaveholder...
This dissertation combines history, anthropology, and literary criticism in analyzing how, at the en...
Few researchers have attempted to show that colonialism was associated with an on-going task of divi...
text"Making Race: The Role of Free Blacks in the Development of New Orleans' Three-Caste Society, 17...
This thesis is a study of free people of colour during the era of emancipation in Barbados, with a p...
The study examines the economic, political, and social repercussions of the Haitian Revolution (1791...
This study is about how ideology was used to create a nefarious cultural representation of Africans ...
This dissertation explores the links between violence, race, and honor in French Saint Domingue (Hai...
How did Africans imagine the future of the Caribbean slave societies where they lived? In an extraor...
The object of this study is to analyze the use and adaptation of racialist ideology in the Afro-Hisp...
The Haitian Revolution is often overlooked in Historical analysis, but had far reaching effects. Th...
This dissertation examines the ways that slaves and free blacks participated in and shaped the Bourb...
Using two Atlantic World events— the Haitian Revolution and Nat Turner’s Rebellion— as temporal boo...
In the late 18th century appeared in France a group of enlightened philanthropists who promoted the ...
The Fear of French Negroes is an interdisciplinary study that explores how people of African descent...
Focussing on the early nineteenth century, this article examines the ways in which white slaveholder...
This dissertation combines history, anthropology, and literary criticism in analyzing how, at the en...
Few researchers have attempted to show that colonialism was associated with an on-going task of divi...
text"Making Race: The Role of Free Blacks in the Development of New Orleans' Three-Caste Society, 17...
This thesis is a study of free people of colour during the era of emancipation in Barbados, with a p...
The study examines the economic, political, and social repercussions of the Haitian Revolution (1791...
This study is about how ideology was used to create a nefarious cultural representation of Africans ...
This dissertation explores the links between violence, race, and honor in French Saint Domingue (Hai...
How did Africans imagine the future of the Caribbean slave societies where they lived? In an extraor...