Routes of Passage
Title | Routes of Passage PDF eBook |
Author | Ruth Simms Hamilton |
Publisher | MSU Press |
Pages | 415 |
Release | 2007-07-26 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1628954604 |
Routes of Passage provides a conceptual, substantive, and empirical orientation to the study of African people worldwide. Routes of Passage addresses issues of geographical mobility and geosocial displacement; changing cultural, political, and economic relationships between Africa and its diaspora; interdiaspora relations; political and economic agency and social mobilization, including cultural production and psychocultural transformation; existence in hostile and oppressive political and territorial space; and confronting interconnected relations of social inequality, especially class, gender, nationality, and race.
Routes of Passage
Title | Routes of Passage PDF eBook |
Author | Ruth Simms Hamilton |
Publisher | MSU Press |
Pages | 382 |
Release | 2006-11-09 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1628954590 |
Routes of Passage provides a conceptual, substantive, and empirical orientation to the study of African people worldwide. The book addresses issues of geographical mobility and geosocial displacement; changing culture, political, and economic relationships between Africa and its diaspora; interdiaspora relations; political and economic agency and social mobilization, including cultural production and psychocultural transformation; existence in hostile and oppressive political and territorial space; and confronting interconnected relations of social inequality, especially class, gender, nationality, and race.
Routes of Passage
Title | Routes of Passage PDF eBook |
Author | Ruth Simms Hamilton |
Publisher | MSU Press |
Pages | 420 |
Release | 2007 |
Genre | History |
ISBN |
Routes of Passage provides a conceptual, substantive, and empirical orientation to the study of African people worldwide. The book addresses issues of geographical mobility and geosocial displacement; changing culture, political, and economic relationships between Africa and its diaspora; interdiaspora relations; political and economic agency and social mobilization, including cultural production and psychocultural transformation; existence in hostile and oppressive political and territorial space; and confronting interconnected relations of social inequality, especially class, gender, nationality, and race.
Routes of Passage: Rethinking the African Diaspora
Title | Routes of Passage: Rethinking the African Diaspora PDF eBook |
Author | Ruth Simms Hamilton |
Publisher | |
Pages | 269 |
Release | 2007 |
Genre | African diaspora |
ISBN | 9781628964547 |
Routes of Passage
Title | Routes of Passage PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | |
Pages | |
Release | 2007 |
Genre | |
ISBN | 9780870136924 |
Routes of Passage: Rethinking the African Diaspora
Title | Routes of Passage: Rethinking the African Diaspora PDF eBook |
Author | Ruth Simms Hamilton |
Publisher | |
Pages | 403 |
Release | 2006 |
Genre | African diaspora |
ISBN | 9781628964530 |
Routes of Remembrance
Title | Routes of Remembrance PDF eBook |
Author | Bayo Holsey |
Publisher | University of Chicago Press |
Pages | 296 |
Release | 2008-09-15 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 0226349772 |
Over the past fifteen years, visitors from the African diaspora have flocked to Cape Coast and Elmina, two towns in Ghana whose chief tourist attractions are the castles and dungeons where slaves were imprisoned before embarking for the New World. This desire to commemorate the Middle Passage contrasts sharply with the silence that normally cloaks the subject within Ghana. Why do Ghanaians suppress the history of enslavement? And why is this history expressed so differently on the other side of the Atlantic? Routes of Remembrance tackles these questions by analyzing the slave trade’s absence from public versions of coastal Ghanaian family and community histories, its troubled presentation in the country’s classrooms and nationalist narratives, and its elaboration by the transnational tourism industry. Bayo Holsey discovers that in the past, African involvement in the slave trade was used by Europeans to denigrate local residents, and this stigma continues to shape the way Ghanaians imagine their historical past. Today, however, due to international attention and the curiosity of young Ghanaians, the slave trade has at last entered the public sphere, transforming it from a stigmatizing history to one that holds the potential to contest global inequalities. Holsey’s study will be crucial to anyone involved in the global debate over how the slave trade endures in history and in memory.