Contenu du sommaire : Atlantic Slavery and the Making of the Modern World
| Revue |
Current Anthropology |
|---|---|
| Numéro | Vol.61, Sup. n°22, 2020 |
| Titre du numéro | Atlantic Slavery and the Making of the Modern World |
| Texte intégral en ligne | Accessible sur l'internet |
Introduction
- Ibrahima Thiaw andDeborah L. Mack p. 145–158
Articles
HISTORICIZING CAPITALIST EXPANSION, ATLANTIC SLAVERY, AND EMPIRES
- Atlantic Slavery and the Rise of the Capitalist Global Economy - Joseph E. Inikori p. 159–171

- The Slavery Business and the Making of “Race” in Britain and the Caribbean - Catherine Hall p. 172–182

- Atlantic Slavery and the Rise of the Capitalist Global Economy - Joseph E. Inikori p. 159–171
ATLANTIC SLAVERY AND THE DIPLOMACY OF IDENTITY MAKING
- Archaeology under the Blinding Light of Race - Michael L. Blakey p. 183–197

- From Country Marks to DNA Markers: The Genomic Turn in the Reconstruction of African Identities - Sarah Abel andHannes Schroeder p. 198–209

- Diasporic Citizenship under Debate: Law, Body, and Soul - Katharina Schramm p. 210–219

- Slavery, Anthropological Knowledge, and the Racialization of Africans - Jemima Pierre p. 220–231

- Archaeology under the Blinding Light of Race - Michael L. Blakey p. 183–197
ATLANTIC EXPERIENCES AND THE PRODUCTION AND CONTESTATION OF INEQUALITY AND INJUSTICE
- Sovereignty after Slavery: Universal Liberty and the Practice of Authority in Postrevolutionary Haiti - J. Cameron Monroe p. 232–247

- From the Transatlantic Slave Trade to Contemporary Ethnoracial Law in Multicultural Ecuador: The “Changing Same” of Anti-Black Racism as Revealed by Two Lawsuits Filed by Afrodescendants - Jean Muteba Rahier p. 248–259

- Serving Status on the Gambia River Before and After Abolition - Liza Gijanto p. 260–275

- The Problem: Religion within the World of Slaves - Mark P. Leone p. 276–288

- Sovereignty after Slavery: Universal Liberty and the Practice of Authority in Postrevolutionary Haiti - J. Cameron Monroe p. 232–247
ATLANTIC SLAVERY, REMEMBRANCE, MEMORIALIZATION, AND AFFECT
- The Crying Child: On Colonial Archives, Digitization, and Ethics of Care in the Cultural Commons - Temi Odumosu p. 289–302

- A “tone of voice peculiar to New-England”: Fugitive Slave Advertisements and the Heterogeneity of Enslaved People of African Descent in Eighteenth-Century Quebec - Charmaine A. Nelson p. 303–316

- Valongo: An Uncomfortable Legacy - Tania Andrade Lima p. 317–327

- Raising the Dead: Walls of Names as Mnemonic Devices to Commemorate Enslaved People - Ana Lucia Araujo p. 328–339

- The Crying Child: On Colonial Archives, Digitization, and Ethics of Care in the Cultural Commons - Temi Odumosu p. 289–302


