1st Edition

Post/Colonialism and the Pursuit of Freedom in the Black Atlantic

Edited By Jerome C Branche Copyright 2018
    294 Pages
    by Routledge

    294 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Post/Colonialism and the Pursuit of Freedom in the Black Atlantic is an interdisciplinary collection of essays of wide historical and geographic scope which engages the legacy of diaspora, colonialism and slavery.



    The contributors explore the confrontation between Africa’s forced migrants and their unwelcoming new environments, in order to highlight the unique individual experiences of survival and assimilation that characterized Atlantic slavery. As they focus on the African or Afro-diasporan populations under study, the chapters gauge the degree to which formal independence, coming out of a variety of practices of opposition and resistance, lasting centuries in some cases, has translated into freedom, security, and a "good life."



    By foregrounding Hispanophone, Lusophone, and Francophone African and Afro-descendant concerns, over and against an often Anglo-centric focus in the field, the book brings a more representative approach to the area of diaspora or Black Atlantic studies, offering a more complete appreciation of Black Atlantic cultural production across history and across linguistic barriers.

    Introduction  Part I: Iberian Colonialism: Some Principles, People, Praxis.  1. Black Atlantic Identities and the Spanish Inquisition  2. Picturing the Afro-Hispanic Struggle for Freedom in Early Modern Spain  3. Health, Raciality and Modernity in Colonial Equatorial Guinea  4. From Lusotropicalism to Lusofonia: Brazil-Angola Cultural Exchanges under the Sign of Coloniality  Part II: Postcolonial Conundrums: Dystopia, Relocation, the ‘Postcolony’  5. Origins and Representations of the Dictatorial State in Postcolonial Africa  6. Restless Flying from Tunisia to Haiti: A Question of Locating the Tunisian Revolution in Relation to Haiti and the Postcolonial Black Atlantic  7. No Telephone to Heaven: Post-Colonial Writing, the Pursuit of Freedom and Colonialism’s Genocidal Impulse  8. The Lines of Anti-imperialism: The Circulation of Militant Cinema During the Long 1960s  9. (Re)mapping Black Paris: African Space in the Imperial Centre  10. Animal Presences: Post-Revolutionary Scenarios in Angola and Cuba  11. A Post-Colonial, National, and Post-National Discourse in Angola Poetry in the Work of Manuel Rui  Part III: Identitarian Reflections  12. Citizenship and Freedom in the Black Atlantic after 1945 – Context and Challenge  13. African Diasporic Autochthonomies: A Syncretic Methodology for Liberatory Indigeneities

    Biography

    Jerome Branche is Professor of Latin American Literature and Cultural Studies at the University of Pittsburgh, USA.