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8/19/2019 Reviewed Work- Blacks and Blackness in Central America- Between Race and Place by Lowell Gudmundson, Justin… http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/reviewed-work-blacks-and-blackness-in-central-america-between-race-and-place 1/4  Cambridge University Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to The Americas. http://www.jstor.org Review Author(s): Claudia Leal Review by: Claudia Leal Source: The Americas, Vol. 69, No. 2 (October 2012), pp. 262-264 Published by: Cambridge University Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/23269846 Accessed: 14-03-2016 03:40 UTC Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at http://www.jstor.org/page/  info/about/policies/terms.jsp JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. This content downloaded from 198.82.230.35 on Mon, 14 Mar 2016 03:40:49 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
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Reviewed Work- Blacks and Blackness in Central America- Between Race and Place by Lowell Gudmundson, Justin Wolfe Review by- Claudia Leal the Americas

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Page 1: Reviewed Work- Blacks and Blackness in Central America- Between Race and Place by Lowell Gudmundson, Justin Wolfe Review by- Claudia Leal the Americas

8/19/2019 Reviewed Work- Blacks and Blackness in Central America- Between Race and Place by Lowell Gudmundson, Justin…

http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/reviewed-work-blacks-and-blackness-in-central-america-between-race-and-place 1/4

 Cambridge University Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to The Americas.

http://www.jstor.org

ReviewAuthor(s): Claudia Leal

Review by: Claudia LealSource: The Americas, Vol. 69, No. 2 (October 2012), pp. 262-264Published by: Cambridge University PressStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/23269846Accessed: 14-03-2016 03:40 UTC

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at http://www.jstor.org/page/  info/about/policies/terms.jsp

JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of contentin a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship.

For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

This content downloaded from 198.82.230.35 on Mon, 14 Mar 2016 03:40:49 UTCAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 2: Reviewed Work- Blacks and Blackness in Central America- Between Race and Place by Lowell Gudmundson, Justin Wolfe Review by- Claudia Leal the Americas

8/19/2019 Reviewed Work- Blacks and Blackness in Central America- Between Race and Place by Lowell Gudmundson, Justin…

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 262 Book Reviews

 This short review cannot do justice to the richness of this book. It is an important con

 tribution to the contemporary history of both countries, a valuable reference for the

 scholarship on migration and the transnational movements of ideas and political prac

 tices, and a suggestive insight into the evolution of political ideas in Latin America.

 Rafagas de un exilio is a careful, intelligent, clearly written, and unflinching attempt to

 add the balance and depth of history to the engagement of memory.

 Columbia University

 New Tork, New Tork

 Pablo A. Piccato

 Africana, Slavery, and Diaspora Studies

 Blacks and Blackness in Central America: Between Race and Place. Edited by Lowell

 Gudmundson and Justin Wolfe. Durham: Duke University Press, 2010. Pp. viii,

 416. Illustrations. Notes. Bibliography. Index. $89.96 cloth.

 This collection of essays came out of a 2004 conference on the history of the African

 diaspora in an area stretching from Panama to Guatemala. It includes five articles on

 the colonial period and six that focus on the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. They

 were written by 11 of the leading scholars in the field, three of them from Central

 America. By compiling the articles into a single volume the editors remind scholars of

 Latin America, as well as those who study the African diaspora, of the role that African

 people and their descendants have played in shaping these societies. Blackness is much

 more typically associated with the insular Caribbean and Brazil. The editors suggest,

 however, that an examination of the Central American experience will not only help to

 fill in gaps within African diaspora studies, but by highlighting different kinds of expe

 riences may even break new conceptual ground.

 The first five articles are solid and together provide a good picture of the Caribbean

 coast in the eighteenth century. Not surprisingly, most of them are centered on slavery,

 although they acknowledge the importance of free blacks. They show that many of the

 region's slaves had a great deal of autonomy, a condition apparently rooted in the sub

 ordinate role of slavery, especially on the frontier. Russell Lohse recounts how, in the

 absence of their owners, slaves in Matina (Costa Rica) managed cacao plantations,

 which needed sometimes as little as two slaves. These men (for slave women remained

 in the Central Valley) provided for their own needs and participated in Caribbean trade

 networks. In this manner they blurred the distinction between slave and peasant. So

 did the slaves building the port of Omoa in Honduras, as studied by Rina Caceres: they

 received wages and were responsible for their own reproduction. Both Caceres and

 Lohse attribute the flexibility of slavery partly to what they call the humid and

 unhealthy climate of the coast. It made plantation owners live elsewhere and con

 tributed to the replacement of subsistence rations by daily wages in Omoa. In a simi

 lar setting—the hot, humid, and forested Pacific coast of Colombia—slavery, although

 of paramount importance, was also relatively flexible. Catherine Komisaruk gives fur

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 Book Reviews 263

 ther evidence of slaves' autonomy through freedom of movement and maintenance of

 crops, but away from the coast in Guatemala and into the nineteenth century. She con

 centrates on slaves' ability to use the legal system to negotiate the conditions of their

 servitude.

 Slavery lost importance relatively early in Central America and as Komisaruk reminds

 us, the descendants of Africans mixed with other Hispanicized free people and were

 eventually considered to be part of the general category of ladino, an umbrella term

 used to designate those considered non-indigenous. In his study of the sugar planta

 tions of Amatitlan (Guatemala), Paul Lokken emphasizes that the category gente

 ladina, which emerged during the second half of the seventeenth century, included

 persons of African descent. He shows, therefore, that ladinos are not simply mestizos

 (understood as the mixture of Spanish and Indian), as has been generally thought.

 Alfonso Munera (Fronteras imajjinadas, 2005) has made a similar claim for the term

 libres de todos los colores in New Granada, which has been equated to mixed-bloods by

 many historians. He reminds us that free blacks were also part of this category. Both

 Munera and Lokken seek greater recognition for the role that African descendants

 played in the histories they study, a role partially masked by social classifications and the

 ideological readings of them.

 In his fascinating study of the Mosquitia, Karl Offen contributes to our understanding

 of colonial social categories as he delves into the ways that Mosquitos classified them

 selves internally and vis-a-vis others. Mosquito understanding of social divisions owed

 much to the complex Caribbean realities of migration, trade, and war that several arti

 cles in this volume highlight. They divided themselves into Sambo (those who mixed

 with African survivors of a shipwreck) and Tawira, a division made along color lines, at

 least according to a British observer. The Tawira distinguished themselves from wild

 Indians (even capturing and selling them as slaves). Furthermore, the term 'Mosqui

 tomen' suggests that they viewed themselves as part of a larger international commu

 nity, along with Englishmen and others. However, Offen and other authors of this

 book tend to impose more recent understandings of race onto the colonial realities

 they study. Komisaruk, for instance, defines the colonial concept of calidad as race or

 rank. Magali M. Carrera (Imagining Indentity in New Spain, 2003), among others, has

 pointed out the importance of properly understanding the logics of colonial classifica

 tions as opposed to those developed in the nineteenth century, which popularized the

 concept of race as we understand it today.

 The section on the post-Independence period is less gratifying. Three of the six articles

 deal with Nicaragua and span an array of periods, geographies, questions, and methods.

 The remaining pieces are an odd mixture. Lara Puttman explains how the international

 crisis—especially the pressure to comply with eugenics-based U.S. immigration policy—

 led Central American countries in the late 1920s and early 1930s to shift from welcom

 ing the abundant West Indian migrants to firmly closing their doors to them. Ronald

 Harpelle's article on company wives in the United Fruit Company's white zones

seems out of place. Although Mauricio Melendez's meticulously researched lists of

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 264 Book Reviews

 Costa Ricans and Nicaraguans with African blood (including the Somozas) allow him to

 demonstrate the diffusion of blackness, his article lacks analysis.

 By focusing on the relation between race and place in the national imaginary, Juliet

 Hooker makes real the editors' claim that off-the-beaten-path histories have the poten

 tial to help broaden our understanding of the African diaspora and Latin American his

 tory. She presents a compelling argument about how the racialization of the Mosquito

 Coast played a crucial role in the process of defining citizenship in Nicaragua. The

 British recognition of the Mosquito kingdom created much anxiety among

 Nicaraguans, who considered the coast inferior and savage and viewed it as increasingly

 black and foreign. Incorporation into Nicaragua, achieved at the end of the nineteenth

 century, was therefore critical for national formation, but it led to a process of nation

 alization that paradoxically, but not surprisingly, meant disenfranchisement for the

 regional populace. Justin Wolfe's piece similarly highlights the links between race and

 place, but at the local level. Liberal politics from the 1940s through the 1960s had as

 protagonists men from San Felipe, a barrio in Leon (one the two most important

 Nicaraguan cities at the time), known for its Afro-descendant population. While their

 poorer casta background influenced these politicians' positions, they did not identify

 themselves by race but rather blended into the category of ladino and associated them

 selves with place. Wolfe further explains that these men's political success (and identity)

 came at the cost of less radical politics. Lowell Gudmundson analyses in detail the rare

 and telling 1883 census, which included race categories, for four towns with African

 descendents in western Nicaragua.

 All those interested in the history of Black Latin America will find this book useful.

 They will enjoy its maps and photographs, and will not forget its suggestive cover.

 Universidad de los Andes

 Bogota, Colombia

 Claudia Leal

 Public Memory of Slavery: Victims and Perpetrators in the South Atlantic. By Ana Lucia

 Araujo. Amherst, Mass.: Cambria Press, 2010. Pp. xix, 500. Figures. Tables. Bib

 liography. Index. $134.99 cloth.

 Ana Lucia Araujo's work has its moments of reinforcing and redirecting several dis

 courses that are quite important to modern and postmodern intellectual conceptual

 izations. However, for the most part, those moments are fragmentary and narrative,

 more anecdotal than analytical. To be sure, Araujo's work is important, as witnessed by

 what it does and what it evokes. What it does is evidenced in her introduction and the

 book's first and last chapters.

 The introduction attempts a juxtaposition of memory and history and serves as a ref

 erence to the book's title and thesis. Yet, it overlooks the ways in which many con

 temporary historians begin their work: from the vantage of memory. They look for the

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