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"New negroes from Africa": slave trade abolition and free African settlement in the nineteenth-century Caribbean
Rosanne Marion Adderley
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Frontmatter
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Acknowledgments (page xi)
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Introduction (page 1)
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1. Potential Laborers or "Troublesome Savages"? Settlement of Liberated Africans in the Bahamas (page 23)
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2. "Binding them to the trade of digging cane holes": Settlement of Liberated Africans in Trinidad (page 63)
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3. "A fine family of what we call creole Yarabas": African Ethnic Identities in Liberated African Community Formation (page 92)
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4. "Assisted by his wife, an African": Gender, Family, and Household Formation in the Experience of Liberated Africans (page 126)
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5. Orisha Worship and "Jesus Time": Religious Worlds of Liberated Africans (page 153)
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6. "Powers superior to those of other witches": New African Immigrants and Supernatural Practice beyond Religious Spheres (page 182)
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7. "Deeply attached to his native country": Visions of Africa and Mentalities of Exile in Liberated African Culture (page 203)
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Conclusion: African Creoles and Creole Africans (page 234)
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Appendix 1. Reports of Liberated African Arrivals in the Bahamas from Governors' Correspondence (page 241)
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Appendix 2. Reports of Liberated African Arrivals in Trinidad from Governors' Correspondence (page 245)
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Notes (page 249)
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Select Bibliography (page 303)
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Index (page 317)
Citable Link
Published: c2006
Publisher: Indiana University Press
- 9780253347039 (hardcover)
- 9780253218278 (paper)