In Rituals of Resistance Jason R. Young explores the religious
and ritual practices that linked West-Central Africa with the
Lowcountry region of Georgia and South Carolina during the era of
slavery. The choice of these two sites mirrors the historical
trajectory of the transatlantic slave trade which, for centuries,
transplanted Kongolese captives to the Lowcountry through the ports
of Charleston and Savannah. Analyzing the historical exigencies of
slavery and the slave trade that sent not only men and women but
also cultural meanings, signs, symbols, and patterns across the
Atlantic, Young argues that religion operated as a central form of
resistance against slavery and the ideological underpinnings that
supported it.
Through a series of comparative chapters on Christianity, ritual
medicine, burial practices, and transmigration, Young details the
manner in which Kongolese people, along with their contemporaries
and their progeny who were enslaved in the Americas, utilized
religious practices to resist the savagery of the slave trade and
slavery itself. When slaves acted outside accepted parameters -- in
transmigration, spirit possession, ritual internment, and conjure
-- Young explains, they attacked not only the condition of being a
slave, but also the systems of modernity and scientific rationalism
that supported slavery. In effect, he argues, slave spirituality
played a crucial role in the resocialization of the slave body and
behavior away from the oppressions and brutalities of the master
class. Young's work expands traditional scholarship on slavery to
include both the extensive work done by African historians and
current interdisciplinary debates in cultural studies,
anthropology, and literature.
Drawing on a wide range of primary sources from both American
and African archives, including slave autobiography, folktales, and
material culture, Rituals of Resistance offers readers a nuanced
understanding of the cultural and religious connections that linked
blacks in Africa with their enslaved contemporaries in the
Americas. Moreover, Young's groundbreaking work gestures toward
broader themes and connections, using the case of the Kongo and the
Lowcountry to articulate the development of a much larger African
Atlantic space that connected peoples, cultures, languages, and
lives on and across the ocean's waters.
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