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The Deepest Dye - Obeah, Hosay, and Race in the Atlantic World (Hardcover)
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The Deepest Dye - Obeah, Hosay, and Race in the Atlantic World (Hardcover)
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How colonial categories of race and religion together created
identities and hierarchies that today are vehicles for
multicultural nationalism and social critique in the Caribbean and
its diasporas. When the British Empire abolished slavery, Caribbean
sugar plantation owners faced a labor shortage. To solve the
problem, they imported indentured “coolie” laborers, Hindus and
a minority Muslim population from the Indian subcontinent.
Indentureship continued from 1838 until its official end in 1917.
The Deepest Dye begins on post-emancipation plantations in the West
Indies—where Europeans, Indians, and Africans intermingled for
work and worship—and ranges to present-day England, North
America, and Trinidad, where colonial-era legacies endure in
identities and hierarchies that still shape the post-independence
Caribbean and its contemporary diasporas. Aisha Khan focuses on the
contested religious practices of obeah and Hosay, which are
racialized as “African” and “Indian” despite the diversity
of their participants. Obeah, a catch-all Caribbean term for
sub-Saharan healing and divination traditions, was associated in
colonial society with magic, slave insurrection, and fraud. This
led to anti-obeah laws, some of which still remain in place. Hosay
developed in the West Indies from Indian commemorations of the
Islamic mourning ritual of Muharram. Although it received certain
legal protections, Hosay’s mass gatherings, processions, and mock
battles provoked fears of economic disruption and labor unrest that
led to criminalization by colonial powers. The proper observance of
Hosay was debated among some historical Muslim communities and
continues to be debated now. In a nuanced study of these two
practices, Aisha Khan sheds light on power dynamics through
religious and racial identities formed in the context of
colonialism in the Atlantic world, and shows how today these
identities reiterate inequalities as well as reinforce demands for
justice and recognition.
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