One of the few interdisciplinary volumes on Bahia available, Tthis book contains contributions covering a wide chronological and topical range by scholars whose work has made important contributions to the field of Bahian studies over the last two decades.
One of the few interdisciplinary volumes on Bahia available,
The Making of Brazil’s Black Mecca: Bahia Reconsidered contains contributions covering a wide chronological and topical range by scholars whose work has made important contributions to the field of Bahian studies over the last two decades.
The authors interrogate and problematize the idea of Bahia as a Black Mecca, or a haven where Brazilians of African descent can embrace their cultural and spiritual African heritage without fear of discrimination. In the first section, leading historians create a century-long historical narrative of the emergence of these discourses, their limitations, and their inability to effect meaningful structural change.
chapters by social scientists in the second section present critical reflections and insights, some provocative, on deficiencies and problematic biases built into current research paradigms on blackness in Bahia. As a whole the text provides a series of insights into the ways that inequality has been structured in Bahia since the final days of slavery.
About the Author
Scott Ickes is Visiting Assistant Professor in the History Department at Gustavus Adolphus College and author of African-Brazilian Culture and Regional Identity in Bahia, Brazil.
Bernd Reiter is Professor of Comparative Politics at the University of South Florida's School of Interdisciplinary Global Studies. He is author of
The Dialectics of Citizenship and
The Crisis of Liberal Democracy and the Path Ahead and coeditor of
Bridging Scholarship and Activism and
Afrodescendants, Identity, and the Struggle for development in the Americas.