Description
Freedom's Captives offers a compelling, narrative-driven history of the gradual abolition of slavery in the majority-black Colombian Pacific.
About the Author
Yesenia Barragan is Assistant Professor of Latin American History at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, New Jersey. She is the author of Selling Our Death Masks: Cash-for-Gold in the Age of Austerity (2014) and Principal Investigator of the bilingual digital database The Free Womb Project.
Reviews
'Freedom's Captives is a unique and elegantly written study of slavery, freedom, and unfreedom that creatively challenges assumptions to inform our understandings of Early Modern African-descended people in the Americas. The book will establish Barragan as a preeminent scholar on free womb laws and practices as they related to the abolition of slavery.' Kevin Dawson, Associate Professor of History, University of California, Merced
'With great insight, Yesenia Barragan introduces the concept of 'free-womb captivity' to parse the predicaments of Black autonomy in the aftermath of Colombia's 1821 Free Womb Law. The resulting work is a brilliant analysis of the project of gradual abolition that prompts new ways to think comparatively about the Black Pacific and the Atlantic world. Freedom's Captives sets a new standard for writing about the Spanish American abolitions of the mid-nineteenth-century.' Celso Thomas Castilho, Vanderbilt University
'Freedom's Captives is a fascinating and important contribution to the study of slavery and abolition in Spanish America. From the perspective of the "Black Pacific" region of Colombia, one of slavery's cores in South America, Barragan weaves together the histories of legal abolition in the new republic with remarkable traces of the lives of the enslaved and freed people in Choco. The book powerfully illustrates crucial nuances in the process of Colombia's gradual abolition, while integrating Spanish America in broader discussions on abolition in the Atlantic world.' Marcela Echeverri, Yale University and author of Indian and Slave Royalists in the Age of Revolution
'Yesenia Barragan's captivating book takes us to Colombia's Choco in the first half of the nineteenth century and masterfully exposes the tensions of gradual emancipation. It honors the lives of those whose freedom was delayed and helps us understand the complex paths of erecting new republics.' Claudia Leal, Associate Professor of History, Universidad de los Andes in Bogota, Colombia
'... it joins the dazzling array of contemporary studies about slavery in the Black Atlantic of the last decade, making an exciting and important contribution to this dynamic, morally compelling, literature. It will redefine many people's understanding of the Atlantic and the meaning of Atlantic history by mapping another region into our collective historical imagination.' Joshua M. Rosenthal, Journal of Interdisciplinary History
'... Barragan illustrates how deeply important this period was, especially because it featured so many different definitions and gradations of freedom and unfreedom, all heavily contested by people throughout Colombia ... this deeply researched volume should be read by anyone interested in slavery and freedom in the Americas.' Evan C. Rothera, Global Maritime History
'... this book excels at placing the Choco at the center of discussions on abolition in the Atlantic world while positioning Barragan as an innovative voice in the study of Colombian history today.' Angela Perez-Villa, H-Net: Humanities and Social Science Reviews Online
'Freedom's Captives imaginatively interweaves myriad archival sources, including laws, court cases, baptismal records, notarial records, and wills, with travel narratives. Barragan's historical ethnographic approach is impressive ... [the book] will be of interest to scholars and students of Colombian, Latin American, US, and African diaspora history.' Bethan R. Fisk, Hispanic American Historical Review
Book Information
ISBN 9781108832328
Author Yesenia Barragan
Format Hardback
Page Count 257
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 660g
Dimensions(mm) 236mm * 159mm * 24mm