Lugares que fueron

There is a wide range of investigators that dealt with different areas of the slave trade—the economic, legal, smuggling, transportation, demographic, entrepreneurial and merchant areas—as well as its related illnesses and the abolition of slavery. Every port and place related to the slave business...

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Autor principal: Osvaldo Otero
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
FR
PT
Publicado: Centre de Recherches sur les Mondes Américains 2010
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/a2e5cfe8959e4ebfb77a31a6ea06db1e
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:a2e5cfe8959e4ebfb77a31a6ea06db1e2021-12-02T10:39:00ZLugares que fueron1626-025210.4000/nuevomundo.58594https://doaj.org/article/a2e5cfe8959e4ebfb77a31a6ea06db1e2010-01-01T00:00:00Zhttp://journals.openedition.org/nuevomundo/58594https://doaj.org/toc/1626-0252There is a wide range of investigators that dealt with different areas of the slave trade—the economic, legal, smuggling, transportation, demographic, entrepreneurial and merchant areas—as well as its related illnesses and the abolition of slavery. Every port and place related to the slave business has been broadly studied, making an analysis of the multiple faces of this process. However, investigations about the transitory warehouses where captives were hold are scarce. Within this framework and its historiographical blanks, historians like us, who are interested in studying the materialization of places—as well as the material culture, and the symbolic and spatial interaction between men and their habitat—, try to enter the spaces of that complex system of meaningful and significant objects and places that structure spatiality. Thus, we manifest the need to take the slaves' warehouses as subject of analysis, studying the technological, functional and symbolic net that these people established between them and their captors, i.e., between slavery and power.Osvaldo OteroCentre de Recherches sur les Mondes AméricainsarticleAfricaAmericasBlack menhabitatprisonslave tradeAnthropologyGN1-890Latin America. Spanish AmericaF1201-3799ENFRPTNuevo mundo - Mundos Nuevos (2010)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
FR
PT
topic Africa
Americas
Black men
habitat
prison
slave trade
Anthropology
GN1-890
Latin America. Spanish America
F1201-3799
spellingShingle Africa
Americas
Black men
habitat
prison
slave trade
Anthropology
GN1-890
Latin America. Spanish America
F1201-3799
Osvaldo Otero
Lugares que fueron
description There is a wide range of investigators that dealt with different areas of the slave trade—the economic, legal, smuggling, transportation, demographic, entrepreneurial and merchant areas—as well as its related illnesses and the abolition of slavery. Every port and place related to the slave business has been broadly studied, making an analysis of the multiple faces of this process. However, investigations about the transitory warehouses where captives were hold are scarce. Within this framework and its historiographical blanks, historians like us, who are interested in studying the materialization of places—as well as the material culture, and the symbolic and spatial interaction between men and their habitat—, try to enter the spaces of that complex system of meaningful and significant objects and places that structure spatiality. Thus, we manifest the need to take the slaves' warehouses as subject of analysis, studying the technological, functional and symbolic net that these people established between them and their captors, i.e., between slavery and power.
format article
author Osvaldo Otero
author_facet Osvaldo Otero
author_sort Osvaldo Otero
title Lugares que fueron
title_short Lugares que fueron
title_full Lugares que fueron
title_fullStr Lugares que fueron
title_full_unstemmed Lugares que fueron
title_sort lugares que fueron
publisher Centre de Recherches sur les Mondes Américains
publishDate 2010
url https://doaj.org/article/a2e5cfe8959e4ebfb77a31a6ea06db1e
work_keys_str_mv AT osvaldootero lugaresquefueron
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