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Imagining the Past, Remembering the Future: Forms of Knowledge in the Afro-Brazilian Diaspora [Pehme köide]

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Imagining the Past, Remembering the Future investigates the interlinked art, history, religion, philosophy, and cosmology of oral traditions across the Afro-Brazilian diaspora, arguing that these varied cultural expressions together constitute distinctive forms of knowledge.

Over the centuries, from the transatlantic slave trade to voluntary mass migrations through the digital era, African cultural practices have taken root and transformed in the Americas. Even though Afro-Brazilians make up a large share of the global Black diaspora, and Brazilian culture in turn has been deeply shaped by African influences, their particular contributions remain overlooked.

Imagining the Past, Remembering the Future investigates the interlinked art, history, religion, philosophy, and cosmology of oral traditions across the Afro-Brazilian diaspora, arguing that these varied cultural expressions together constitute distinctive forms of knowledge. Through case studies of sacred and secular performances, Isis Barra Costa shows how Afro-Brazilian concepts and practices preserve and renew an ever-changing diasporic philosophy. Ranging across parades of Black royal courts, Carnaval performing groups, oracular literature, “spirit-dictated” novels, and many other forms, she illuminates the survival and transformation of African cosmologies, epistemologies, and poetics in the Americas. Foregrounding oral narratives, Barra Costa sheds light on the nonhegemonic protagonists and canons of the Black Atlantic: the spaces and beings, kingdoms and heroes, philosophers and historians that orient Afro-Brazilian memory and imagination. By tracing forms of knowledge across the global African diaspora, this deeply interdisciplinary book reveals the transformative potential of Afro-Brazilian philosophical paradigms.

Arvustused

Imagining the Past, Remembering the Future weaves insights from multiple disciplines to illuminate the African cultural foundations of the Americas, especially Brazil. Beautiful and necessary, it calls for slow, attentive readingguiding us toward the subtle dimensions of Afro-diasporic knowledge embedded in the textures of everyday sound, image, and gesture. -- Zeca Ligiéro, artist and dean of the Center for Letters and Arts, Federal University of the State of Rio de Janeiro Imagining the Past, Remembering the Future offers a rich and wide-ranging analysis about Afro-Atlantic epistemologies, narration, and performance in Brazilfrom Carnaval parades to spirit-led novels. Barra Costa writes with lyrical grace, using vivid metaphors and poetic language to explore their recreation and transformation across time, from the transatlantic slave trade to digital networks today. -- Christopher J. Dunn, author of Contracultura: Alternative Arts and Social Transformation in Authoritarian Brazil By studying the Kongo-Angola-Yoruba-Ewe-Brazilian archive with the same rigor usually devoted to the European archive, Barra Costa brilliantly shows how the most diverse African matrices do not dissolve into a single national culture and how they illuminate a world still haunted by colonialism. -- Pedro Meira Monteiro, Arthur W. Marks 19 Professor of Spanish and Portuguese, Princeton University

Acknowledgments
Road Opener: Òsanyìns Bird: The Triumph of the Small
Introduction: Entering Other Forests
Part I. The Euro-Afro-Brazilian Archive: European Civilization in Brazil
1. Visual Art Images: I See . . . I Narrate. But What Is It That I Am
Seeing?
2. History: A Gold Medal for the Best Story
3. Literature: Heroes, Monsters, Giants, and the Canon
4. Poetics: Two Giants and Two Prophecies
5. Social Sciences: Three Founding Moments of Euro-Afro-Brazilian Studies
(Separating the Wheat from the Chaff)
6. Law: Peace Without a Voice Is Not Harmony
Part II. The Kongo-Angola-Yoruba-Ewe-Brazilian Archive: African Civilizations
in Brazil
7. Mundiongo: Ancestral Languages: Entering Other Forests
8. Aruanda: Ancestral Geographies: A Map to Aruanda and Other Realms
9. Ìtàn: Ancestral Genealogies: Obatala Came Before Us
Final Considerations: Dikenga and Opón Ifa: Ancestral Times and Technologies
Notes
Works Cited
Index
Isis Barra Costa is assistant professor of contemporary Brazilian cultural and literary studies at the Ohio State University.