Preface
A Note on the Structure of the Volume
Introduction
Part 1. Africa in the Caribbean Imagination
1. Of Laughter and Kola Nuts; or, What Does Africa Have to Do with
the African Diaspora? / Faith Lois Smith
2. From Africa to "The Islands": New World Voyages in the Fiction
of Maryse Condé and Paule Marshall / Anthea Morrison
Part 2. Race, Gender, and Agency in the Shadow of Slavery
3. Mary Rose: "White" African Jamaican Woman? Race and Gender in
Eighteenth-Century Jamaica / Linda L. Sturtz
4. Trading Places: Market Negotiations in Wonderful Adventures of
Mrs. Seacole in Many Lands / Antonia MacDonald-Smythe
5. Blacks in the White Imagination: Race in the Investigation of
Rape on Nineteenth-Century Emigrant Ships to the Colonial Caribbean
/ Verene A. Shepherd
6. Maria Jones of Africa, St. Vincent, and Trinidad / Brinsley
Samaroo
7. Slavery, Marriage, and Gender Relations in Eastern Yorubaland,
18751920 / Olatunji Ojo
8. On Equal/Unequal Footing with Men: Diaspora Linkages and Issues
of Gender and Education Policy in Barbados, 18751945 / Janice
Mayers
Part 3. Building Diaspora in the Web of Empire
9. Amy Ashwood Garvey and the Nigerian Progress Union / Hakim
Adi
10. "Crack Kernels, Crack Hitler": Export Production Drive and Igbo
Women during the Second World War / Gloria Chuku
11. Intersections: Nigerian Episodes in the Careers of Three West
Indian Women / LaRay Denzer
12. Immigrant Voices in Cyberspace: Spinning Continental and
Diasporan Africans into the World Wide Web / Mojúbàolú Olúfúnké
Okome
Notes on Contributors
Index
Identity, race, and social networks in the African diaspora
Judith A. Byfield is Associate Professor in the Africana Studies and Research Center at Cornell University and author of The Bluest Hands: A Social and Economic History of Women Dyers in Abeokuta (Nigeria), 1890–1940.
LaRay Denzer is Visiting Scholar in the Department of History at Santa Clara University. She is author (with Jane I. Guyer and Adigun A. B. Agbaje) of Money Struggles and City Life: Devaluation in Ibadan and Other Urban Centers in Southern Nigeria, 1986–1996.
Anthea Morrison is Senior Lecturer and Head of the Department of Literatures in English, University of the West Indies, Mona Campus (Jamaica).
"In foregrounding women's changing forms of engagement during their border-crossing encounters, we also gain important knowledge about both changing gender ideologies and changing politics, policies, and political movements across the African diaspora at given historical periods. This is a critically important and interesting addition not only to diaspora studies, but also to our general knowledge about gender roles in the Caribbean and hinterland Nigeria." Constance Sutton, New York University "This collection ... strengthens the significance of understanding the African diaspora across time, and provides a model for studying other diasporas as well." Constance Sutton, New York University
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