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Facing Up To The Past : Perspectives On Commemoration Of Slavery From Africa, The Americas And Europe
"Facing up to the past" is the attempt of various scholars to investigate the triangular slave trade from Africa, America and Europe. Following the slave trade routes in the Western Indian Oceans this books gives crucial insights how slavery is remembered and commemorated as national identity. Divided into three sections (Africa, The Americans and Europe) numerous articles unfold different aspects of the slave trade of mentioned historical interrelated continents:rnrnAFRICArnAchille Mbembe, The Subject of the World.rnAma Ata Aidoo, Of Forts, Castles, Silences.rnCarl Niehaus, Freedom, Yes!... And Then What?rnAbdul Sheriff, The Slave Trade and Slavery in the Western Indian Ocean: Significant Contrasts.rnNigel Worden, The Forgotten Region: Commemorations of Slavery in Mauritius and South Africa.rnrnTHE AMERICASrnIna Césaire, To Each His Commemoration.rnRichard Price, Monuments and Silent Screamings: A View from Martinique.rnPedro Pérez Sarduy, In Living Memory> The Commemoration of Slavery in Cuba.rnLowell Fiet, Puerto Rico, Slavery, Race: Faded Memories, Erased Histories.rnFlávio dos Santos Gomes, The Legacy of Slavery and Social Relations in Brazil.rnLivio Sansone, Remembering Slavery from Nearby: Heritage Brazilian Style.rnHilary Beckles, Emancipation in the British Caribbean.rnOlu Oguibe, Slavery and the Diaspora Imagination.rnAllison Blakely, Remembering Slavery in the United States.rnSeymour Drescher, Commemorating Slavery and Abolition in The United States of America.rnrnEUROPErnFrank Martinus Arion, Un Beau Geste.rnAlex van Stipriaan, The Long Road to a Monument.rnRuben Gowricharn, The Creole Janus Face.rnHarry Goulbourne, African Slaves and the Atlantic World.rnJames Walvin, Slavery, Truth and Reconciliation.rnRatan Vaswandi, A Respectable Table.
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