Changing Hisotry: Afro-Cuban Cabildos and Societies of Color in the Nineteenth Century.Changing Hisotry: Afro-Cuban Cabildos and Societies of Color not of the white race; - commonly meaning, esp. in the United States, of negro blood, pure or mixed. See also: Color in the Nineteenth Century. By Philip A. Howard. (Baton Rouge Baton Rouge (băt`ən r zh) [Fr.,=red stick], city (1990 pop. 219,531), state capital and seat of East Baton Rouge parish, SE La. : Louisiana University Press, 1998. xxii plus 227pp. $35.00). This monograph is a welcome addition to nineteenth-century Cuban history, making an excellent connection between the two major award-winning monographs on Cuban history: Rebecca J. Scott, Slave Emancipation in Cuba: The Transition to Free Labor the labor of freemen, as distinguished from that of slaves. See also: Free , 1860-1899 (1985); and Aline Helg, Our Rightful Share: The Afro-Cuban Struggle for Equality, 1886-1912 (1995). This book is also a valuable contribution to the recent emerging field of historical and anthropological studies on comparative slavery, emancipation, and race relations race relations Noun, pl the relations between members of two or more races within a single community race relations npl → relaciones fpl raciales , and the African diaspora The African diaspora is the diaspora created by the movements and cultures of Africans and their descendants throughout the world, to places such as the Americas, (including the United States, Canada, the Caribbean, Central America, and South America) Europe and Asia. in Latin America Latin America, the Spanish-speaking, Portuguese-speaking, and French-speaking countries (except Canada) of North America, South America, Central America, and the West Indies. and the Caribbean; and African American history African American history is the portion of American history that specifically discusses the African American or Black American ethnic group in the United States. Most African Americans are the descendants of African slaves held in the United States from 1619 to 1865. in a broad framework. Howard maintains: "The struggles for freedom and equality of Africans and their descendants DESCENDANTS. Those who have issued from an individual, and include his children, grandchildren, and their children to the remotest degree. Ambl. 327 2 Bro. C. C. 30; Id. 230 3 Bro. C. C. 367; 1 Rop. Leg. 115; 2 Bouv. n. 1956. 2. in nineteenth-century Cuba are the essential concerns of this study" (xiii). For this purpose, the author chose the topic of Afro-Cubans' unique mutual-aid associations which prevailed in the cities, such as the capital city of Havana, and located such Black associations at the center of his arguments. Unlike the case of two other major slave societies of the Americas, i.e. Brazil and the Antebellum South, Cuba did not become a slave society until the mid-eighteenth century. With the continuing massive influx of new arrivals from Africa, the proportion of African-born population in Cuba grew very quickly and the Cuban population became predominantly enslaved Enslaved may refer to:
The book has been divided into eight chapters. Chapter 1, discussing the formation of the colonial slave society during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, serves as a good foundation for the author' arguments on race, class, and identity in the following chapters. Chapter 2, based on the author's reading of abundant secondary literature, discusses the African roots of the cabildos de naciones and emphasizes their uniqueness by distinguishing them from the prevailing Catholic lay sodalities named cofradias. This chapter helps us understand fully ethnic diversity among the African-born slave population and historical processes by which ethnicity was recreated and ethnic solidarity was created as "Africanness" under New World slave systems. Chapter 3 examines the diverse roles and functions of Afro-Cuban cabildos as mutual-aid associations, which covered both their spiritual/religious and socioeconomic needs of their members. Chapters 4-8 elaborate several historical stages as the Afro-Cuban populat ion began to actively engage themselves in their own empowerment. Chapter 4 covers the initial awakening for political empowerment led by some prominent ethnic cabildo cabildo (käbēl`dō), autonomous municipal council, the lowest administrative unit in the Spanish government. The institution was especially influential in Spanish America, where it was set up in the early 16th cent. leaders. The subject of chapter 5 is Afro-Cubans' involvement in the independence movement, through their mutual-aid organizations, during the 1860s and 1870s. The last four chapters (5-8) reveal how, in the declining agro-export society, the Afro-Cuban population, recognizing their needs for emancipating e·man·ci·pate tr.v. e·man·ci·pat·ed, e·man·ci·pat·ing, e·man·ci·pates 1. To free from bondage, oppression, or restraint; liberate. 2. and their right for political equality in Cuban society, reorganized re·or·gan·ize v. re·or·gan·ized, re·or·gan·iz·ing, re·or·gan·iz·es v.tr. To organize again or anew. v.intr. To undergo or effect changes in organization. and strengthened their mutual-aid associations by uniting themselves politically as Afro-Cubans. By discussing the Afro-Cuban mutual-aid associations in the nineteenth century and emphasizing Afro-Cubans as active participants in "changing history," Howard successfully demonstrates the creolization of ethnic identities as African into a collective racial identity as Afro-Cuban, although he does not present the issues of identity as his major focus in this book. There are a few reservations to note. First, this book easily gives its readership the impression that only the urban Afro-Cuban population got involved in their political struggles for freedom. Were their social movements This is a partial list of social movements.
Started by Italian immigrants Amedeo Obici and Mario Peruzzi in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, in 1906, it was incorporated in 1908 encouraged them to form their own cabildos for the sake of slave control. Yet we cannot see the roles of the rural slave population in the Afro-Cuban political struggles; one may wonder how the urban population was connected with the rural population. Second, in relation to the first point, the author should have discussed the class stratification Class stratification is a form of social stratification. Class stratification is the tendency of classes to divide into separate classes. An economic and cultural rift usually exists between different classes. of the urban Afro-Cuban society and the intersections of race and class for Afro-Cubans' political empowerment since the Afro-Cuban cabildos were formed and participated in by urban artisanal blacks--the Black elite. Third, th is book does not refer to gender roles in such Afro-Cuban voluntary associations. To what degree did gender determine the Afro-Cuban individual's participation in such associations and their struggles for emancipation? Did women play equally crucial roles in such voluntary associations? And if so, did such roles change over time in relation to political and socioeconomic changes in the larger society? Helg, for instance, mentions in the introduction of her book the inevitable absence of women participants in Afro-Cubans' military struggles for freedom in the post-emancipation society. Unfortunately also, the book neither provides new primary data nor new interpretations on the popular topic of Afro-Cuban cabildos, which have drawn much professional attention for their uniqueness. This book does not refer to, for instance, the historian Fannie Rushing's unpublished dissertation at the University of Chicago (1992), and the anthropologist Stephan Palmie's ongoing research. In addition, Howard's prose generally lacks rhetorical sophistication so·phis·ti·cate v. so·phis·ti·cat·ed, so·phis·ti·cat·ing, so·phis·ti·cates v.tr. 1. To cause to become less natural, especially to make less naive and more worldly. 2. and elegance and his writing tends to get redundant at times. Yet, by discussing Afro-Cuban cabilodos together with other types of Afro-Cuban voluntary associations, such as sociedades de cor which virtually replaced the former at the mid-nineteenth century, rather than separating them from one another, the book successfully presents a good survey on Afro-Cubans' voluntary associations and their collective actions in rigorous pursuit of freedom and political equality in Cuban society. Changing History will be widely read by historians of Latin America, e specially of Cuba and the other former slave societies such as Brazil, and may well be adopted for college courses as a useful textbook in Latin American and African American history, as well as in comparative slavery and emancipation. |
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