Center for African and African American Research John Hope Franklin Young Scholars Program Database
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Publications [#219656] of J. Lorand Matory

Books

  1. J.L. Matory, Religión del Atlántico negro: Tradición, Transnacionalismo y Matriarcado en el Candomblé Brasileño (2014), Editorial Oriente/Casa del Caribe, Santiago de Cuba, Cuba
    (last updated on 2015/01/18)

    Author's Comments:
    This book was solicited for translation and presentation as the featured book of the "Festival del Caribe" in July 2014 or 2015, hosted by the Casa del Caribe in Santiago de Cuba.

    Abstract:
    Spanish-language translation of Black Atlantic Religion. The classical African-inspired religions of the Americas result not from the inert "survival " of African identities and practices predating the slave trade but from a circum-Atlantic "dialogue" among Africans, African Americans, European colonialists, white creoles, and culturally hybrid black trans-Atlantic travelers, who selectively canonized and revised their African-inspired religions in reaction to the politics of multiple African colonies and American nation-states.


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