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The Latin American Identity and the African Diaspora - Ethnogenesis in Context (Hardcover, New)
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The Latin American Identity and the African Diaspora - Ethnogenesis in Context (Hardcover, New)
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There is extensive research found both in books and articles on the
various topics of Afro Latinism/Afro Hispanism that is directed
mainly at the non-native. Nonetheless, one still notices either
cultural confusion or political reluctance to accept the identity
of Blackness that the Latin American native lives with--for himself
or for others- -on a daily basis. For the average Cuban,
Venezuelan, Peruvian, and so forth, along with their Latin
counterparts, Blackness in racial terms surfaces as a matter of
degrees of African-relatedness that is then counterbalanced by
degrees of European and/or Amerindian genomic components. It is
only in non-native cultures that one encounters such disparate
comparisons as "statistics for Hispanics versus statistics for
Blacks." But is it not possible to find persons that are
ethnoracially Black included in the demographics for Hispanics? The
overarching aim of this book, then, is to determine whether it is
possible to perceive a constituency within the Latin American whole
who is also an integral part of the African Diaspora. It examines
the concept of African-relatedness within the totality of the Latin
American sphere--not just in one isolated country or
region--through a careful process of literary analysis. By
exploring the works of Latin American novelists, poets, and
lyricists, this study shows how they creatively expose their most
intimate feelings on ethnic Blackness through a semiotic reliance
on the inner voice. At the same time, the reader becomes a witness
to the writers' associations with a sense of Africanness as it
artistically affects them and their communities in their
formulations of self-identity. Unique to this volume is the
scholarly presentation of the presence of a group of people in
Ghana, West Africa, who owe their raisond'etre as a clan to their
ancestral origins in Brazil. Having been accepted and received by
an endemic tribe of what was called the Gold Coast at an historical
moment in the nineteenth century, a community of escaped slaves and
deported ex-slaves from Brazilian bondage regrouped as an ethnic
whole. The reality of their existence gives new meaning to the term
African Diaspora. To this day, their descendants identify
themselves as displaced Latin Americans in Africa. Undoubtedly,
both this surprising feature of Latin Americans returning to the
African continent and the book as a whole will stimulate further
discussion on the issue of who is Black and who is Hispanic as well
as generate continued, in-depth research on the relationship
between two continents and their shared genotypology. The Latin
American Identity and the African Diaspora is an important
acquisition for collections in Latin American studies, literary
criticism, Hispanic studies, ethnic studies, cultural anthropology,
and the African diaspora.
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