MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
https://decolonialatlas.wordpress.com/2018/02/18/500-years-of-black-resi...
In 1526, the very first Africans arrived in North America as slaves of the San Miguel de Guadalupe colony. They promptly revolted and took refuge with the local indigenous people, becoming the first permanent non-native inhabitants of what would become the United States.
Cool map. There were pinpoints on this map of events I had never heard of. Like the 1803 Igbo Landing Mass Suicide or the 1823 Great Dismal Swamp Maroons.
Edited to fix links
Comments
I’m not sure if this Hollywood Reporter article on Black Panther was the link you wanted
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/black-panther-taps-500-years-history-1085334
by rmrd0000 on Sun, 02/18/2018 - 12:46pm
Oh, no!
No, it wasn't, rmrd. In fact, none of the links and excerpts I quoted showed up in the post. I will redo and post. Thanks for responding.
by wabby on Sun, 02/18/2018 - 1:07pm
Thanks for the link. The map will be filled as academics and regular citizens are drawn to the site.
by rmrd0000 on Sun, 02/18/2018 - 2:10pm
I find interesting on the "About" page:
Because decolonization is a process of unlearning and rediscovering, we’re especially committed to indigenous language revitalization through toponymy – the use of place names.
This is one reaction to globalization that I find interesting, it is almost like a new interpretation of the "rainbow" thing, trying to revive lots of cultural alternatives rather than promote assimilation into one world culture. Libertarian conservatives into "one world" conspiracies should be on board but they are not, rather they often ridicule liberal scholars trying to save and protect different ways of living. This is the "go local as much as you can" thing.
by artappraiser on Sun, 02/18/2018 - 6:30pm
P.S. It is also what the best historians have always done: you can't truly understand what happened without digging into the contemporaneous world itself, without understanding its language, how people thought, what they kept and what they threw away, what they paid attention to and what they didn't....
by artappraiser on Sun, 02/18/2018 - 6:35pm
Yep. What you said.
The liberal scholar, who sent me the link in the first place, calls it the 'unbraiding of histories'. Her focus is on the indigenous of North America, but she has traveled as far away as New Zealand to learn...stuff. She is not a historian, but, hopefully, by May she will be a Dr. of Anthropology.
by wabby on Sun, 02/18/2018 - 7:56pm
I'm not entirely sure if this NYT piece I read today fits here, but it feels like it does. It's a fascinating article about rice ... a specific thought-lost grain and it's West African lineage.
by barefooted on Sun, 02/18/2018 - 7:42pm
It belongs. I had never heard of hill rice before, just like I had never heard of many of the pinpoints on the decolonialatlas map.
Thanks for the link, Missy.
by wabby on Sun, 02/18/2018 - 8:04pm
Thanks for the serendipitous opportunity. ;-)
by barefooted on Sun, 02/18/2018 - 8:21pm