1997
DOI: 10.2307/3172026
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Ethnicity and the Slave Trade: “Lucumi” and “Nago” as Ethnonyms in West Africa

Abstract: Ethnicity was evidently critical for the operation of the Atlantic slave trade, on both the African and the European sides of the trade. For Africans, given the general convention against enslaving fellow citizens, ethnic identities served to define a category of “others” who were legitimately enslavable. For African Muslims this function was performed by religion, though here too, it is noteworthy that the classic discussion of this issue, by the Timbuktu scholar Ahmad Baba in 1615, approaches it mainly in te… Show more

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Cited by 151 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Examples 4 and 5, like most of the Carabalí songs that I have heard, are voiced in the first person to give what can be described as a timeless historical account of cabildo members as “Africans” and specifically as “Carabalí” who are now in Cuba. As Palmié (1993) describes, the ethnic labels for slaves—prominently including Congo, Carabalí, and Lucumí in Cuba—were complex and fluid categories that were as much a product of slave‐trade imaginaries and New World ethnogenesis as a reflection of any African sense of identity at the time (see also Law 1997).…”
Section: The Historical Present In the Timeless Pastmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Examples 4 and 5, like most of the Carabalí songs that I have heard, are voiced in the first person to give what can be described as a timeless historical account of cabildo members as “Africans” and specifically as “Carabalí” who are now in Cuba. As Palmié (1993) describes, the ethnic labels for slaves—prominently including Congo, Carabalí, and Lucumí in Cuba—were complex and fluid categories that were as much a product of slave‐trade imaginaries and New World ethnogenesis as a reflection of any African sense of identity at the time (see also Law 1997).…”
Section: The Historical Present In the Timeless Pastmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The analytic orientations toward continuity or novelty have relevance to the religions of the Yoruba diaspora for we face the methodological issue of what is ‘Yoruba’ in the religions under investigation and what is a new construction in a new world. We have seen that the identities we know as ‘Yoruba’‘Lucumi’ and Nagô’ themselves were forged out of the pressures of colonialism and the slave trade (Law 1997). Is the presence of identifiable orishas in, say, Brazilian Umbanda, sufficient to classify Umbanda as a Yoruba‐derived religion?…”
Section: The Diasporan Traditionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The following brief discussion of this example is based on an article she presented in Toronto in 1997. 12 With Robin Law's recent article on 'Lucumi' and 'Yoruba' as ethnonyms in West Africa, 13 de Oliveira's paper provides insight into the social transformations induced by the return of the former slaves from Brazil.…”
mentioning
confidence: 97%