The twin phenomena of the formation of Creole strata and societies and cultural creolization have dominated debates on the uniqueness of Caribbean contexts and universalist notions of cross-cultural interaction at a global level. These analytical threads are integrated into a study of processes of creolization and acculturation in their multiple forms in areas of (former) Portuguese presence in West Africa. Deeply entangled with four centuries of the Atlantic slave trade and the rise and fall of the colonial state, the remarkable diversity of cross-cultural encounters in empire is addressed here for Cabo Verde, Guinea-Bissau, São Tomé and Príncipe, and Angola.publishersversionpublishe
L'objectif de cette thèse est de s'interroger sur la nature de la présence portugaise en Angola au 1...
In this article, I provide a comparative discussion of Creoles and creolization. The core concept ce...
This article aims to reflect on the current discussion about the terminologies that define the Afro-...
Based on archival research in six countries, this thesis distils new documentary material into an an...
This article develops the notions of “frontier” and “Luso-Africanity”, addressing some cases anchore...
AbstractThis paper tackles the concept of creolization that lies at the very center of discussions o...
The process of creolization that resulted from the encounter of Africans with Portuguese in the West...
This article analyses the issue of miscegenation in Portugal, which is directly associated with the...
Both nurturing and giving institutional expression to a solidarity of diverse people and scholarly c...
Capoeira—a combat game developed by enslaved Afro-Brazilians for mental and physical liberation—has ...
Between 1440 and 1640, from 300,000 to 350,000 African slaves were forcefully moved from sub-Saharan...
Although Portugal now occupies the outer fringe of the capitalist world-system's core, it once ...
The transatlantic slave trade, which persisted for 366 years, marks the single largest migration of ...
Capoeira—a combat game developed by enslaved Afro-Brazilians for mental and physical liberation—has ...
The imaginary of the Portuguese empire in Africa has been strongly present in the narratives of Port...
L'objectif de cette thèse est de s'interroger sur la nature de la présence portugaise en Angola au 1...
In this article, I provide a comparative discussion of Creoles and creolization. The core concept ce...
This article aims to reflect on the current discussion about the terminologies that define the Afro-...
Based on archival research in six countries, this thesis distils new documentary material into an an...
This article develops the notions of “frontier” and “Luso-Africanity”, addressing some cases anchore...
AbstractThis paper tackles the concept of creolization that lies at the very center of discussions o...
The process of creolization that resulted from the encounter of Africans with Portuguese in the West...
This article analyses the issue of miscegenation in Portugal, which is directly associated with the...
Both nurturing and giving institutional expression to a solidarity of diverse people and scholarly c...
Capoeira—a combat game developed by enslaved Afro-Brazilians for mental and physical liberation—has ...
Between 1440 and 1640, from 300,000 to 350,000 African slaves were forcefully moved from sub-Saharan...
Although Portugal now occupies the outer fringe of the capitalist world-system's core, it once ...
The transatlantic slave trade, which persisted for 366 years, marks the single largest migration of ...
Capoeira—a combat game developed by enslaved Afro-Brazilians for mental and physical liberation—has ...
The imaginary of the Portuguese empire in Africa has been strongly present in the narratives of Port...
L'objectif de cette thèse est de s'interroger sur la nature de la présence portugaise en Angola au 1...
In this article, I provide a comparative discussion of Creoles and creolization. The core concept ce...
This article aims to reflect on the current discussion about the terminologies that define the Afro-...