1. Introduction: Ethnicity and the African Diaspora, Paul E.
Lovejoy and David V. Trotman, York University
2. Ethnic Designations of the Slave Trade and the Reconstruction of
the History of Transatlantic Slavery, Paul Lovejoy, York
University
3. The Story of Nbena, 1817-1820: Unlawful Enslavement and the
Concept of "Original Freedom" in Angola, Jose Curto, York
University
4. African Ethnicities and the Meanings of Mina, Gwendolyn Hall,
Rutgers University
5. A Quality of Anguish: The Igbo Response to Enslavement in the
Americas, Michael A. Gomez
6. I, Francisco Castaneda, Negro Esclavo Caravali--Carabali
Ethnicity in Colonial New
Granada, Renee Soulodre-La France, York University
7. On the Frontiers of the African Diaspora in Central America: The
African Origins of San Fernando de Omoa, Rina Caceres, Universidad
da Costa Rica
8. Devils or Sorcerers, Muslims or Studs: Manding in the Americas,
Sylviane Anna Diouf
9. The Reconstruction of Ethnicity in Bahia: The Case of the Nago
in the Nineteenth Century, Maria Ines Cortes de Oliveira
10. The Afro-Brazilian Communities of the Bight of Benin in the
Nineteenth Century, Elisee Soumonni, Universite Nationale du
Benin
11. Ethnicity, Colour and Gender in the Experiences of Enslaved
Women on Non-Sugar Properties in Jamaica, Verene A.
Lazarus-Shepherd, University of the West Indies
12. Africanizing and Creolizing the Plantation Frontier of
Trinidad, 1787-1834, David V. Trotman, York University
13. Ethnic Politics among Africans in Nineteenth-Century Bahia,
Joao Jose Reis, Universidade Federal da Bahia
Paul E. Lovejoy, Distinguished Research Professor in the Department of History at York University, holds the Canada Research Chair in African Diaspora History and is Director of the Harriet Tubman Institute for Research on the Global Migrations of African Peoples. He is the author or editor of numerous volumes on the African diaspora. David V. Trotman is Associate Professor of History and Humanities and Associate Director of the Harriet Tubman Institute at York University. He received his doctorate at Johns Hopkins University and most recently, he is author of Contesting Freedom: Control and Resistance in the Post-Emancipation Caribbean (with Gad Heuman).
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