oin
us for an international and interdisciplinary conference to explore
the history of African Americans in Middle America and to work to create
a framework for the comparative discussion of historical experiences
shared by and perhaps unique to the nations of the mainland Hispanic
Caribbean.
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José Agustín Arrieta, "La Sorpresa,"
1850 |
he
post-World War II explosion in scholarship on the history of Africans
and their descendents in the Americas has been one of the most fruitful
areas for the development of historical and sociological knowledge worldwide.
However, the great majority of that scholarship has focused on nations
and areas where African-descent populations are both recognized as such
today and comprise the majority population either regionally or nationally.
The islands of the Caribbean, the United States, and Brazil have, in
effect, been the preferred setting for this extraordinary expansion
of knowledge and remain so today in scholarly terms.
n the margins,
both geographically and conceptually, of that emerging Black Atlantic
framework, can be found the Hispanic mainland Caribbean nations from
Mexico through Central America and Panama, to Colombia and Venezuela.
Here
one finds little recognition, in either popular or scholarly terms,
of the region’s dominant role in the earliest Colonial slave trade
or of the fact that people of African descent constituted the majority
of non-indigenous populations long thereafter. Similarly, despite (or
perhaps because of) the centrality of these people and imageries of
Blackness in the later development of national identities and historical
consciousness, these same nation states have often countenanced widespread
practices of social, political, and regional exclusion of Blacks.
ach of these
nations has witnessed the post-Colonial development of mestizo
or mixed-race ideologies of national identity that have systematically
downplayed African roots or participation in the process, in favor of
Spanish and Indian antecedents and contributions. Thus,
both their Colonial history, so central to the peopling of the Americas
with Africans, and the very contributions of mixed-race populations
of African descent since then, have been relegated to an episodic, peripheral
rendering of one after another of the individual national histories.
Indeed, the very success of such an assimilationist blurring of ethnic
categories in the more recent past has played a large part in a relative
lack of scholarly interest in research on these cases, as well as profoundly
misguided popular images of their historical past. Moreover, that same
nationalist success story has worked as a positive disincentive for
any understanding of the story of African Americans in Middle America
in a larger, regional framework or for scholarly discussions of these
topics across those same national boundaries.
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Detail from Street Scene, Cartagena, Colombia, 1933
Latin American Fotofolio, Album 4
Courtesy of The Latin American Library, Tulane University |
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hrough
discussions among colleagues whose work on the nations perhaps most
identified with a non-African, mixed-race or mestizo national
identity in modern times, we will engage each other in the common goal
of revising notions of hybridity whose historical importance and precocity
can hardly be overstated. If Mexico set the terms of this conversation
with its early 20th century development of post-revolutionary imagery,
it is no less true that each of the other nations pursued similarly
complex processes of identity formation thereafter. However common the
mestizo prototype that resulted, a sustained comparison will
allow us to better contextualize our individual and collective research,
subjecting relatively isolated, nationally-based research to commentary
and criticism from “foreign” but similar fields and cases.
Indeed, overcoming the professional and geographic separation which
characterizes the group of proposed participants is a major goal of
the conference, its discussions and subsequent publications.
Conference Organizers:
Rina Cáceres Universidad de Costa Rica |
Lowell Gudmundson Mount Holyoke College |
Justin Wolfe Tulane University |