Author:
DE ALMEIDA MARCOS ABREU LEITÃO
Abstract
AbstractBetween 1845 and 1850, the Congo coast became the most important source of slaves for the coffee growing areas in the Brazilian Empire. This essay develops a new methodology to understand the making of the ‘nations’ of 290 Africans found on the slave shipJovem Maria, which boarded slaves in the Congo river and was captured by the Brazilian Navy near Rio de Janeiro in 1850. A close reading of such ‘nations’ reveals a complex overlapping between languages and forms of identification that alters the historian's use of concepts such as ‘ethnolinguistic group’ and ‘Bantu-basedlingua franca’ in the Atlantic world. Building on recent developments in Central African linguistics, the article develops a social history of African languages in the Atlantic that foregrounds how recaptives negotiated commonalities and boundaries in the diaspora by drawing on a political vocabulary indigenous to their nineteenth-century homes in Central Africa.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
21 articles.
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1. Bibliography;After Palmares;2024-08-16
2. Notes;After Palmares;2024-08-16
3. Supplemental List of Sources;After Palmares;2024-08-16
4. A Latin Americanist Introduction to Africanist Comparative Historical Linguistics;After Palmares;2024-08-16
5. Tapera dos Palmares;After Palmares;2024-08-16