Afro-Mexican Lives in the Long Nineteenth Century

Slavery, Freedom, and the Writing of History

Nicole von Germeten author Theodore W Cohen editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Publishing:30th Nov '25

£95.00

This title is due to be published on 30th November, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Afro-Mexican Lives in the Long Nineteenth Century cover

The first book-length examination of abolition and its legacies in Mexico from the Afro-Mexican perspective.

This history of Afro-Mexicans charts their lived experiences from the colonial period, through Mexico's war for independence and the abolition of slavery and caste. Written for both students and scholars, it combines intellectual and cultural perspectives with social and political histories to explore the lives and identities of Afro-Mexicans.As the first book-length examination of abolition and its legacies in Mexico, this collection reveals innovative social, cultural, political, and intellectual approaches to Afro-Mexican history. It complicates the long-standing belief that Afro-Mexicans were erased from the nation. The volume instead shows how they created their own archival legibility by continuing and modifying colonial-era forms of resistance, among other survival strategies. The essays document the lives and choices of Afro-descended peoples, both enslaved and free, over the course of two centuries, culminating during the Mexican Revolution of 1910. Contributors examine how Afro-Mexicans who lived under Spanish rule took advantage of colonial structures to self-advocate and form communities. Beginning with the war for independence and continuing after the abolition of slavery and caste in the 1820s, Afro-descended citizens responded to and, at times, resisted the claims of racial disappearance to shape both local and national politics.

ISBN: 9781009456012

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

293 pages