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African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and...

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African Slavery in the New African Slavery in the New World World
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Page 1: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

African Slavery in the New WorldAfrican Slavery in the New World

Page 2: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

African Slavery in the New WorldAfrican Slavery in the New World

1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context

2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas- why Africa?

3. Ideological Basis of Slavery- racing the “Other”

4. Slavery in the Caribbean, the US South and Canada

- some major distinctions

Page 3: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

Definition of DiasporaDefinition of Diaspora

Greek verb “to disperse”: dia (through) andspeirein (sow/scatter);

The migration of a community through forced or self-willed exile and the efforts of that community to recreate “home” in new geographic spaces;

Diaspora implies exile or bondage and the promise of return.

Page 4: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

James CliffordJames Clifford

“The term “diaspora” is a signifier not simply of transnationality and movement but of political struggles to define the local, as distinctive community, in historical contexts of displacement …. Diaspora cultures thus mediate, in a lived tension, the experiences of separation and entanglement, of living here and remembering/desiring another place” (Routes 252, 255)

Page 5: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

Diaspora as cyclical relationshipDiaspora as cyclical relationship

Page 6: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

James CliffordJames Clifford

“In diaspora experience …. linear history is broken, the present constantly shadowed by a past that isalso a desired, but obstructed future: a renewed painful yearning.” (Routes 264)

Page 7: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

James CliffordJames Clifford

“For black Atlantic diaspora consciousness, the recurring break where time stops and restarts is the Middle Passage. Enslavementand its aftermaths—displaced, repeated structures of racialization and exploitation—constitute a pattern of black experiences inextricably woven in the fabric of hegemonic modernity.” (Routes 264)

Page 8: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

Stuart HallStuart Hall

“The paradox is that it was the uprooting of slavery and transportation and the insertion into the plantation economy (as well as the symbolic economy) of the Western world that ‘unified’ these peoples across their differences, in the same moment as it cut them off from direct access to their past.” (“Cultural Identity and Diaspora” 227)

Page 9: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

Columbus in ContextColumbus in Context

1. Disintegration of feudal system

2. Bankruptcy of European monarchies

3. Rise of Islam

4. Emergence of theory of mercantilism

Page 10: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

Triangular TradeTriangular Trade

Page 11: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

Sources of Slave LabourSources of Slave Labour

1. Indigenous populations

2. European indentured labourers

3. African slaves

Page 12: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

Africa as Africa as thethe source of slave source of slave labour was encouraged by labour was encouraged by existing conditionsexisting conditions

1. Experimentation in sugar production off the West African coast;2. Existing African systems of servitude;3. Thriving overland Islamic slave trade;4. European forts serving colonies off the coast;5. Powerful and centralized African states

Page 13: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

Adu BoahenAdu Boahen

“African scholars and politicians today must be honest and admit that the enslavement and sale ofAfricans from the seventeenth century onwards was done by the Africans themselves, especially the coastal kings and their elders, and that very few Europeans actually ever marched inland and captured slaves themselves. Africans became enslaved mainly through four ways: first, criminalssold by the chiefs as punishment; secondly, free Africans obtained from raids by African and a few European gangs; thirdly, domestic slaves resold,and fourthly; prisoners of war." (Topics In West African History 110).

Page 14: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

Joseph InikoriJoseph Inikori

“It is a mistake to talk of Africans exporting Africans or ‘African leaders’ exporting Africans In the Atlantic slave trade. There were no ‘African leaders in the 18th century. There were Asante leaders, Dahomean leaders, Oyoleaders, Kongo leaders, Benin leaders, and so on. The concept of pan-Africanism is a twentieth-century phenomenon; people on the continent and those transported abroad knew Nothing of such in the 18th century.” (“‘Wonders of Africa’ and the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade” 1-2)

Page 15: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

The Life of Gustavus VassaThe Life of Gustavus Vassa

“I could now speak English tolerably well, and perfectly understood everything that was said. I not only felt myself quite easywith these new countrymen, but relished their society and manners. I no longer looked upon them as spirits, but as men superior to us; and therefore I had the stronger desire to resemble them, to imbibe their spirit, and imitate their manners” (80-81).

Page 16: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

Racial stereotypes in response to Racial stereotypes in response to slaveryslavery

1. Sambo/Quashie/Uncle Tom

2. Mammy

3. Buck/Black Brute/Nat

4. Jezebel

5. Coon

6. Sapphire

Page 17: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

Uncle Tom CaricatureUncle Tom Caricature

Page 18: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

The Little Black SamboThe Little Black Sambo

Page 19: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

Mammy CaricatureMammy Caricature

Page 20: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

Caricature of the Black BruteCaricature of the Black Brute

Page 21: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

Nat Turner Revolt

The 19th century popularization of the Nat stereotype (another form of the black brute) emerged, in response to the bloody insurrection led by Nat Turner on August 21, 1831, in Virginia.

Page 22: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

Jezebel StereotypeJezebel Stereotype

Page 23: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

Coon CaricatureCoon Caricature

Page 24: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

Sapphire CaricatureSapphire Caricature

Page 25: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

Mychal Massie on Michelle ObamaMychal Massie on Michelle Obama

“This country has made it possible for Michelle Obama toenjoy every privilege she and her family enjoy. Compared to the eloquent grace of Jackie Kennedy, Nancy Reagan, Barbara Bush and yes, even Rosalind Carter, she portrays herself as just another angry black harridan who spits in the face of the nation that made her rich, famous and prestigious” WorldNetDaily, February 26, 2008.

Page 26: African Slavery in the New World. 1. Defining Diaspora in a New World Context 2. Europe, Africa and Slavery in the Americas - why Africa? 3. Ideological.

Slavery in the Americas: Some Slavery in the Americas: Some DistinctionsDistinctions

1. Size of slave production

2. Ratio of whites to blacks

3. Relationship to Africa


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