Jump to Content
Brill Logo Brill Logo Brill Logo Brill Logo Brill Logo Brill Logo
  • 中文
  • Deutsch
Access via:
Dar Hadith al Hassania
Login to my Brill account Create Brill Account
Browse Our Titles
African Studies
American Studies
Ancient Near East and Egypt
Art History
Asian Studies
Biblical Studies
Biology
Book History and Cartography
Classical Studies
Education
History
Human Rights and Humanitarian Law
International Law
International Relations
Jewish Studies
Languages and Linguistics
Life Sciences
Literature and Cultural Studies
Media Studies
Middle East and Islamic Studies
Musicology
Philosophy
Religious Studies
Slavic and Eurasian Studies
Social Sciences
Theology and World Christianity

Becoming a Brill Author

Publishing Ethics & AI Policy

Publishing Guides

General Open Access Information

For Authors

For Academic Societies

For Librarians

Research Funding

Open Access Pricing

Books

Journals

Specialty Products

Metadata: Title Lists, MARC & KBART Files

Catalogs, Flyers and Price Lists

Accessing Brill Products

About Brill & its History

Imprints

Careers

Organization

Corporate Social Responsibility

News Archive

Sales Contacts

Ordering from Brill

Editorial Contacts

Offices Worlwide

Press & Reviews

Rights & Permissions

Course Adoption

Contact Form

Help
Brill Logo Brill Logo Brill Logo Brill Logo Brill Logo Brill Logo
Access via:
Dar Hadith al Hassania
Login to my Brill account Create Brill Account
  • 中文
  • Deutsch
Browse Our Titles
African Studies Education Media Studies
American Studies History Middle East and Islamic Studies
Ancient Near East and Egypt Human Rights and Humanitarian Law Musicology
Art History International Law Philosophy
Asian Studies International Relations Religious Studies
Biblical Studies Jewish Studies Slavic and Eurasian Studies
Biology Languages and Linguistics Social Sciences
Book History and Cartography Life Sciences Theology and World Christianity
Classical Studies Literature and Cultural Studies  

Becoming a Brill Author

Publishing Ethics & AI Policy

Publishing Guides

General Open Access Information

For Authors

For Academic Societies

For Librarians

Research Funding

Open Access Pricing

Books

Journals

Specialty Products

Metadata: Title Lists, MARC & KBART Files

Catalogs, Flyers and Price Lists

Accessing Brill Products

About Brill & its History

Imprints

Careers

Organization

Corporate Social Responsibility

News Archive

Sales Contacts

Ordering from Brill

Editorial Contacts

Offices Worlwide

Press & Reviews

Rights & Permissions

Course Adoption

Contact Form

Help

Notes on Contributors

In: Slave Subjectivities in the Iberian Worlds
Access via:
Dar Hadith al Hassania
  • Full Text

Notes on Contributors

Cahen, Michel

is a political historian of modern colonial Portugal and contemporary Portuguese-speaking Africa. He is emeritus CNRS Senior Researcher at the Centre ‘Les Afriques dans le monde’ (Sciences Po Bordeaux). His main interests relate to Marxism and nationalism, identity and citizenship, political identity at the margins, coloniality and creolity. He is the author, among other books, of “Não somos bandidos”. A vida diária de uma guerrilha de direita: a Renamo na época do Acordo de Nkomati (1983–1985), Lisbon, Imprensa de Ciências Sociais, 2019.

Candioti, Magdalena

Researcher at the Instituto de Historia Argentina y Americana “Dr. Emilio Ravignani”, National Council for Scientific and Technological Research (CONICET) and Associate Professor at the Universidad Nacional del Litoral. History of Africa diaspora, slavery and abolition in the Rio de la Plata (Argentina) and Latin America. Author of Una historia de la emancipación negra. Esclavitud y Abolición en Argentina (Buenos Aires, Siglo XXI Editores, 2021); “Interamerican Dialogues and Experimentations in the Spanish South American Gradual Abolitionist Process (1810–1870)”. Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Latin American History, Nov. 2022.

Costa, Robson Pedrosa

is Auxiliar Researcher at the Centre for History of the Universidade de Lisboa, Teacher at the Instituto Federal de Pernambuco and a Specialist in History of Slavery. He is the author of ‘Sweet Masters’: the Order of Saint Benedict and the ‘Good Treatment’ of Slaves, Brazil, Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries”; Historia Crítica 81 (2021): 21–47; Paternalism, Transgression and Slave Resistance in Brazil. Berlin, Degruyter, 2022; with Roth Cassia, “Maria Simoa, Who Birthed Twenty-Four Children”: Slavery, Motherhood, and Freedom on the Benedictine Estates, Pernambuco, Brazil, 1866–1871, Hispanic American Historical Review 103, 1 (2023): 65–99.

Ehalt, Rômulo da Silva

is a Brazilian researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal Theory in Frankfurt, Germany. He has an MA and a PhD from the Tokyo University of Foreign Studies (2011, 2018). His interests are the history of slavery and bondage in Asia as a legal and theological problem and the history of the Society of Jesus in Asia. Currently, he is preparing a book manuscript based on his doctoral dissertation (Jesuits and the Problem of Slavery in Early Modern Japan) and a collective volume on the writings and times of Francisco Rodrigues SJ (1515–1573).

Faria, Patricia Souza de

is an Associate Professor at the Department of History at the Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro. Her research focuses on the study of religious orders, the Inquisition, and enslaved populations in Goa (16th and 17th centuries). Her publications include “O Pai dos Cristãos e as populações escravas em Goa: zelo e controle dos cativos convertidos” (História, São Paulo, v. 39, 2020), and “Catholics and Non-Christians in the Archbishopric of Goa. Provincial Councils, Conversion, and Local Dynamics in the Production of Norms” (In: Manuel B. Saavedra, ed., Norms beyond Empire. Law-Making and Local Normativities in Iberian Asia, Leiden, Brill, 2022).

Fujitani, James Masaki

is assistant professor in transnational history at the University of Nottingham Ningbo. He studies cross-cultural interactions in sixteenth-century East Asia, with particular emphasis on China, Japan, and Portugal. He has recently published articles on slavery in Portuguese Melaka (in the volume Slavery and Bondage in Asia), on the founding of Macau (in the volume War and Trade in Maritime East Asia), and on the Jesuit hospital in Japan (in the Japanese Journal of Religious Studies).

Kabalan, Michel

is a full time integrated researcher in the Instituto de Filosofia, Faculdade de Letras, Universidade do Porto, Portugal. He specializes in several issues in Arabic medieval philosophy with strong philological and historical preoccupations. He recently worked on Arabic Medieval diagrams in the FCT project ‘From Data to Wisdom. Philosophizing Data Visualizations in the Middle Ages and Early Modernity (13th–17th Century)’.

Lara, Silvia Hunold

is Professor of History at the Universidade Estadual de Campinas (UNICAMP), Brazil. She works on the history of slavery in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Brazil, and published, besides several articles and some collective books, three monographs: Campos da Violência. Escravos e senhores na Capitania do Rio de Janeiro, 1750–1808 (Rio de Janeiro, Paz e Terra, 1988), Fragmentos setecentistas. Escravidão, cultura e poder na América portuguesa (São Paulo, Companhia das Letras, 2007), and Palmares & Cucaú. O aprendizado da dominação (São Paulo, Edusp, 2021).

Macedo, Marta

is a researcher at the Institute of Contemporary History, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal. Her current project examines the circulation of coffee and cocoa plantation systems (São Tomé, Brazil, Angola, Belgium Congo and Cameroon), combining approaches from history of science and technology, labour history, environmental history and the history of capitalism. Recently, she co-edited the volume Global Plantations in the Modern World: Sovereignties, Ecologies, Afterlives (Palgrave Macmillan, 2023).

Mattos, Hebe

is Professor of History at Universidade Federal of Juiz de Fora (UFJF) and Universidade Federal Fluminense (UFF) in Brazil and co-director of the Present Pasts_ Memory of Slavery project at the Oral History and Image Lab in both universities (LABHOI/UFF/UFJF). Author of books, academic articles and historical videos, including Beyond Masters and Slaves (HAHR, 1988); Black Troops and Hierarchies of Color in the Portuguese Atlantic World (LBHR, 2008); Escravidão e Subjetividades (Open Edition, 2016); Les Couleurs du Silence (L’Harmattan, 2018), and the documentaries movies of the collection Present Pasts, http://www.labhoi.uff.br/passadospresentes/.

McKinley, Michelle

is the Bernard B. Kliks Professor of Law at the University of Oregon. She has extensively published work on public international law, Latin American legal history, and the law of slavery. Her monograph, Fractional Freedoms: Slavery, Intimacy and Legal Mobilization in Colonial Lima, 1600–1700 was published in 2016. A Spanish edition, Libertades fraccionadas: Esclavitud, intimidated y movilación juridical en la Lima colonial, 1600–1700 was published in 2020. Her articles appear in the Law and History Review; Slavery & Abolition; Journal of Family History; Yale Journal of Law and the Humanities; Unbound: Harvard Journal of the Legal Left.

Nuñez, Sophia Blea

is a Visiting Assistant Professor of Hispanic Studies at Whitman College whose research interests are situated at the intersections of book history, reading culture, gender and sexuality studies, and early modern race and religion. She earned her MA and PhD at Princeton University. In addition to their work on Céspedes, they are preparing a book manuscript on the corporeality of books in the early modern Hispanic world.

Pinheiro, Fernanda Domingos

is a professor at the Instituto de Humanidades at the Universidade da Integração Internacional da Lusofonia Afro-Brasileira (Unilab). Her research focuses on slavery in Portuguese America and the precariousness of freedom in the slave order. She has published Em defesa da liberdade (Fino Traço, 2018) and several articles in specialized journals, including “O perigo da (re)escravização: disputas judiciais de manutenção da liberdade na Mariana setecentista” (Revista Brasileira de História, 2018) and “Injustamente possuídos como escravo” (Projeto História, 2021).

Reis, João José

is a full professor of History at the Universidade Federal da Baia, with a research interest in Brazil in the 19th century, particularly slavery, slave resistance, Afro religion, biography of free and enslaved people, among other related topics. He is the author, among other books, of Divining Slavery and Freedom (Cambridge University Press, 2015), and Ganhadores: a greve negra de 1857 na Bahia (Companhia das Letras, 2019).

Silva, Cristina Nogueira da

is Associate Professor at the Law School of Universidade Nova de Lisboa and researcher at CEDIS. Her main research are classical liberalism and citizenship, the history of the legal personal status in the Portuguese overseas territories, as well as the way legal concepts and institutions were used by enslaved and free subaltern people in Portuguese contemporary empire. Some of her publications are Constitucionalismo e Império. A cidadania no Ultramar português (2009); A Construção jurídica dos territórios ultramarinos portugueses no século XIX (2017); Imperios Ibéricos y representación política (siglos XIX-XX) (ed. with I. Montaud, 2021).

Surwillo, Lisa

is Associate Professor of Iberian Literatures and Cultures at Stanford University. She is a scholar of nineteenth-century Spain and Cuba with a focus on empire, gender, poetry and theater. Among her publications are two books: The Stages of Property: Copyrighting Theater in Nineteenth-Century Spain, Toronto, Toronto University Press 2007; and Monsters by Trade: Slave Traffickers in Modern Spanish Literature and Culture, Redwood City (CA), Stanford University Press, 2014.

Valerio, Miguel A.

is assistant professor of Spanish at Washington University in St. Louis. He is a scholar of the African diaspora in the Iberian world. His research has focused on black Catholic brotherhoods or confraternities and Afro-creole festive practices in colonial Latin America, especially Mexico and Brazil. He is the author of Sovereign Joy: Afro-Mexican Kings and Queens, 1539–1640 (Cambridge University Press, 2022) and a co-editor of Indigenous and Black Confraternities in Colonial Latin America: Negotiating Status through Religious Practices (Amsterdam University Press, 2022).

Voigt, Lisa

is Professor of Spanish and Portuguese at Yale University. A specialist in colonial Latin American literature and culture, she is the author of Spectacular Wealth: The Festivals of Colonial South American Mining Towns (University of Texas Press, 2016) and Writing Captivity in the Early Modern Atlantic: Circulations of Knowledge and Authority in the Iberian and English Imperial Worlds (Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture/University of North Carolina Press, 2009), which won the Modern Language Association’s Katherine Singer Kovacs Prize.

Xavier, Ângela Barreto

is Senior Researcher at the Instituto de Ciências Sociais da Universidade de Lisboa. A specialist in the Portuguese early modern empire, she is the author of Religion and Empire in Portuguese India. Conversion, Resistance, and the making of Goa (2022); Monarquias Ibéricas em Perspectiva Comparada. Dinâmicas Imperiais e Circulação de Modelos Administrativos (ed. with Federico Palomo and Roberta Stumpf, 2018); O Governo dos Outros. Poder e Diferença no Império Português (ed. with Cristina Nogueira da Silva, 2016); and Catholic Orientalism. Portuguese Empire, Indian Knowledge (with Ines G. Županov, 2015).

Citation Info

  • Save
  • Cite
  • Email this content

    Share link with colleague or librarian


    You can email a link to this page to a colleague or librarian:
    Email this content
    or copy the link directly:
    The link was not copied. Your current browser may not support copying via this button.
    Link copied successfully

  • Collapse
  • Expand

Slave Subjectivities in the Iberian Worlds

(16th-20th centuries)

Series:  Studies in Global Slavery, Volume: 15
Cover Slave Subjectivities in the Iberian Worlds
E-Book ISBN:
9789004687158
Publisher:
Brill
Print Publication Date:
12 Dec 2023
  • Subjects
    • African Studies
      • History
    • American Studies
      • Latin America
    • Asian Studies
      • History
    • History
      • Early Modern History
      • Social History
Front Matter
Preliminary Material
Copyright Page
Acknowledgments
Figures and Tables
Notes on Contributors
Prologue: Understanding the Voice of the Enslaved in the Iberian World
Introduction: Slave Subjectivities—Studying Absences?
Part 1 Slave Subjectivities in Asia
Chapter 1 ‘Where All Yndios Are Free’
Chapter 2 The Concubine Slaves of the Portuguese in the China Sea Region
Chapter 3 From Asia to Lisbon
Part 2 Subjectivities in the Context of Labour and Religion
Chapter 4 Work and Identity in the Case of Elena/o de Céspedes
Chapter 5 “Pública Notícia”
Chapter 6 Creolizing Death
Chapter 7 Black Masters
Chapter 8 The Qurʾan in My Notebook
Part 3 Social Mobility and Emancipation
Chapter 9 Central African Echoes in the Wilds of Pernambuco, Brazil, in the Second Half of the Seventeenth Century
Chapter 10 Henrique Dias and the Portuguese Empire
Chapter 11 Against ‘Unjust Captivity’
Chapter 12 Negotiating Emancipation and Social Mobility
Chapter 13 Petitioning from the Body: Cuba and Spain in 1873
Chapter 14 Displacement, Work and Confinement: Plantation Workers in São Tomé
Postface: Enslavement, Race, Liberty and Emotion
Back Matter
Index of Ethnical, Social and Professional Categories
Index of Institutions
Index of Persons
Index of Places
Index of Practices

Metrics

All Time Past 365 days Past 30 Days
Abstract Views 0 0 0
Full Text Views 178 87 6
PDF Views & Downloads 0 0 0

Product Information

Books

Journals

Specialty Products

Metadata: Title Lists, MARC & KBART Files

Catalogs, Flyers & Price Lists

Accessing Brill Products

Authors

Becoming a Brill Author

Publishing Ethics & AI Policy

Publishing Guides

Contact & Info

Sales Contacts

Ordering

Editorial Contacts

Press & Reviews

Contact Form

Stay Updated

Blog

News Archive

Newsletters

Social Media Overview

Investors

Resources Center

General Resources

For Authors

For Librarians

Rights & Permissions

FAQ

Terms and Conditions 

Privacy Statement 

Cookie Settings 

Accessibility

Legal Notice

Sitemap

Terms and Conditions  |  Privacy Statement  |  Cookie Settings |  Accessibility  |  Legal Notice  |  Sitemap  |  Copyright © 2016-2026

 

 

Access via:
Dar Hadith al Hassania
Powered by PubFactory
  • [216.73.216.78|92.112.192.157]
  • 92.112.192.157
Close
Edit Annotation

Character limit 500/500

@!

Character limit 500/500