Thursday, September 19, 2019
African Diaspora Essay -- essays papers
African Diaspora  	  The study of cultures in the African Diaspora is relatively   young. Slavery and the trans-Atlantic slave trade brought numerous  Africans, under forced and brutal conditions, to the New World. Of   particular interest to many recent historians and Africanists is the   extent to which Africans were able to transfer, retain, modify or   transform their cultures under the conditions of their new   environments. Three main schools of thought have emerged in scholarly   discussion and research on this topic. Some argue that there are no   significant connections between Africans and African American   communities in the Americas. Others argue that Africans retained   significant aspects of their cultures. Similar to this argument, some   have argued that Africans, responding to their new environments,   retained and transformed African cultures into new African-American   ethnic units.    Detailed research done on slave communities in Surinam, South   Carolina and Louisiana allow us to look deeper into the stated  arguments. Having recently addressed the same issues using Colonial   South Carolina as a case study, I will focus largely on some of the   arguments and conclusions drawn from this study. The evidence from   South Carolina, Louisiana and Surinam supports the second and third   arguments much more than the first. The third argument, that of   cultural transformation, is the argument I find to be most valid.     John Thornton's analysis of this issue is extremely helpful.     He addresses the "no connections" arguments in chapters 6, 7 and 8. He   outlines the claims made by scholars Franklin Frazier, Stanley Elkins,   Sidney Mintz and Richard Price. Frazier and Mintz believe that the   extreme trauma and disruption experienced by Africans during the   process of enslavement and the middle passage minimized the   possibility that they maintained aspects of their cultures in the new   world. They argue that this process "had the effect of traumatizing   and marginalizing them, so that they would became cultural receptacles   rather than donors" (152).     Mintz and Price have argued the slave trade had the effect of   "permanently breaking numerous social bonds that had tied Africans   together..." (153). Another element of the "no connections" argument   claims that Africans did not receive enough associational time with   each othe...              ... capacity. The use of poison as a form of rebellion is   visible in both the examples from Colonial South Carolina and Jamaica.     Cases of death by poison in Colonial South Carolina leading up to the  Stono Rebellion led to its inclusion in the Negro Act of 1740. The Act made poisoning a felony punishable by death.     In conclusion, both significant African retentions and   transformations took place in the early European settlement of the  Americas. More recently, there has been a tendency to overemphasize or   even romanticize the "Africanisms." While acknowledging "Africanisms"   did make their way into the Americas, I find the evidence from   accounts of early slave cultures and the Anthropological background   provided by Thornton on cultural transformation and change persuasive   in suggesting the formation of Afro- American rather than   "Afro-centric" communities. This approach to the slavery and the slave   era is relatively young and will have to be developed. A conclusion   that is clear after studying works of Peter Wood, Gwendolyn Hall and  Richard Price, is that the early arguments suggesting no connection of   African heritage to the Americas are entirely invalid.                      
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