In recent years, numerous studies have emerged by scholars of Latin America that explore the African presence in early Spanish and Portuguese colonial societies. Largely confined to the plantation zones or lucrative commercial and densely populated urban centers in Mexico, Brazil, the Andes, and the Caribbean, these studies often seek to uncover a historical past that has been lost or subsumed beneath modern nationalizing discourses that envisioned Africans and their descendants as outside the nation, and by extension outside its history. Russell Lohse's groundbreaking study owes much to this literature. However, the author offers an original and insightful take on Africans and the early process of creolization in colonial Costa Rica that challenges notions of a monolithic, culturally and ethnically cohesive African identity in the Americas. More importantly, by centering Africans in the colonial narrative, Lohse dismantles previously accepted notions in Costa...
Article navigation
Book Review|February 01 2016
Africans into Creoles: Slavery, Ethnicity, and Identity in Colonial Costa Rica
Hispanic American Historical Review (2016) 96 (1): 161-163.
- Views Icon Views
-
CiteCitation
Glenn A. Chambers; Africans into Creoles: Slavery, Ethnicity, and Identity in Colonial Costa Rica. Hispanic American Historical Review 1 February 2016; 96 (1): 161–163. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/00182168-3424024
Download citation file:
× - Share Icon Share
- Search
Sign in
Don't already have an account? Register
You could not be signed in. Please check your email address / username and password and try again.
Advertisement
22
Views
0
Citations