AFR 329 - Women & Slavery in the Black Atlantic Instructor
Dennie
From the sixteenth to nineteenth centuries, over 12 million Africans were shipped to the New World. Of those who survived the Middle Passage, fewer than 500,000 arrived in the United States; the vast majority were dispersed throughout the Caribbean and South America. The experiences of enslaved women, as well as the relationships between free and enslaved women, are as diverse as the African diaspora. Given the broad geographical scope of Africans’ arrivals in the New World, this course will offer a comparative examination of women and slavery in the Black Atlantic. Topics for consideration include black women’s gendered experiences of slavery, white women’s roles in slave societies, and women abolitionists. The course will also examine how African and European conceptions of gender shaped the institution of slavery in the New World. Particular attention will be devoted to slavery in West Africa, Barbados, Cuba, Brazil, and the United States.
Fulfills an Historical and Geographical Investigations requirement in the Africana Studies major (Geographic region: Latin America & the Caribbean).
Fulfills a requirement in the History major and minor.
Satisfies the Historical Thought requirement.
Satisfies the Justice, Equality, and Community requirement.
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