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With the growing interest in the history of peoples of African
descent in the Americas, narratives addressing regions outside of
the United States are becoming increasingly popular. The
Conceptualization of Race in Colonial Puerto Rico, 1800-1850
illuminates the role people of African descent played in the
building of a Spanish Caribbean society during the social upheaval
of the early nineteenth century. This examination of cultural
tensions created by changing regional and national definitions and
the fluidity of identity within these structures will appeal to
those interested in colonial race issues, Africans in the Americas,
and gender and race stratification. Kathryn R. Dungy uses gender,
color, and class differences as lenses to understand a colonial
society that was regulated by social relationships within Puerto
Rico, the Caribbean, and the Americas. By examining slave and free
status, color, gender, work, and immigration, she endeavors to
stimulate current debate on issues of gender, color, nation, and
empire, utilizing a unique population and culture in the Black
Atlantic.
With the growing interest in the history of peoples of African
descent in the Americas, narratives addressing regions outside of
the United States are becoming increasingly popular. The
Conceptualization of Race in Colonial Puerto Rico, 1800-1850
illuminates the role people of African descent played in the
building of a Spanish Caribbean society during the social upheaval
of the early nineteenth century. This examination of cultural
tensions created by changing regional and national definitions and
the fluidity of identity within these structures will appeal to
those interested in colonial race issues, Africans in the Americas,
and gender and race stratification. Kathryn R. Dungy uses gender,
color, and class differences as lenses to understand a colonial
society that was regulated by social relationships within Puerto
Rico, the Caribbean, and the Americas. By examining slave and free
status, color, gender, work, and immigration, she endeavors to
stimulate current debate on issues of gender, color, nation, and
empire, utilizing a unique population and culture in the Black
Atlantic.
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