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Introduction

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The Afro-Latin@ Reader
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch The Afro-Latin@ Reader
© 2020 Duke University Press, Durham, USA

© 2020 Duke University Press, Durham, USA

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter ii
  2. Contents vii
  3. Acknowledgments xiii
  4. Editorial Note xv
  5. Introduction 1
  6. I. Historical Background before 1900
  7. Introduction 17
  8. The Earliest Africans in North America 19
  9. Black Pioneers: The Spanish-Speaking Afro-Americans of the Southwest 27
  10. Slave and Free Women of Color in the Spanish Ports of New Orleans, Mobile, and Pensacola 38
  11. Afro-Cubans in Tampa 51
  12. Excerpt from Pulling the Muse from the Drum 62
  13. II. Arturo Alfonso Schomburg
  14. Introduction 65
  15. Excerpt from “Racial Integrity: A Plea for the Establishment of a Chair of Negro History in Our Schools and Colleges,” 67
  16. The World of Arturo Alfonso Schomburg 70
  17. Invoking Arturo Schomburg’s Legacy in Philadelphia 92
  18. III. Afro-Latin@s on the Color Line
  19. Introduction 97
  20. Black Cuban, Black American 99
  21. A Puerto Rican in New York and Other Sketches 113
  22. Melba Alvarado, El Club Cubano Inter-Americano, and the Creation of Afro-Cubanidades in New York City 120
  23. An Uneven Playing Field: Afro-Latinos in Major League Baseball 127
  24. Changing Identities: An Afro-Latin@ Family Portrait 142
  25. ¡Eso era tremendo! An Afro-Cuban Musician Remembers 150
  26. IV. Roots of Salsa: Afro-Latin@ Popular Music
  27. Introduction 155
  28. From “Indianola” to “Ño Colá”: The Strange Career of the Afro-Puerto Rican Musician 157
  29. Excerpt from cu/bop 176
  30. Bauzá–Gillespie–Latin/Jazz: Difference, Modernity, and the Black Caribbean 177
  31. Contesting that Damned Mambo: Arsenio Rodríguez and the People of El Barrio and the Bronx in the 1950s 187
  32. Boogaloo and Latin Soul 199
  33. Excerpt from the salsa of bethesda fountain 207
  34. V. Black Latin@ Sixties
  35. Introduction 209
  36. Hair Conking; Buy Black 211
  37. Carlos A. Cooks: Dominican Garveyite in Harlem, 215
  38. Down These Mean Streets 219
  39. African Things 232
  40. Black Notes and “You Do Something to Me,” 233
  41. Before People Called Me a Spic, They Called Me a Nigger 235
  42. Excerpt from Jíbaro, My Pretty Nigger 244
  43. The Yoruba Orisha Tradition Comes to New York City 245
  44. Reflections and Lived Experiences of Afro-Latin@ Religiosity 252
  45. Discovering Myself: Un Testimonio 262
  46. Excerpt from Dominicanish 266
  47. VI. Afro-Latinas
  48. Introduction 267
  49. The Black Puerto Rican Woman in Contemporary American Society 269
  50. Something Latino Was Up with Us 276
  51. Excerpt from Poem for My Grifa-Rican Sistah, or Broken Ends Broken Promises 280
  52. Latinegras: Desired Women—Undesirable Mothers, Daughters, Sisters, and Wives 282
  53. Letter to a Friend 296
  54. Uncovering Mirrors: Afro-Latina Lesbian Subjects 298
  55. The Black Bellybutton of a Bongo 314
  56. VII. Public Images and (Mis)Representations
  57. Introduction 317
  58. Notes on Eusebia Cosme and Juano Hernández 319
  59. Desde el Mero Medio: Race Discrimination within the Latin@ Community 323
  60. Displaying Identity: Dominicans in the Black Mosaic of Washington, D.C. 326
  61. Bringing the Soul: Afros, Black Empowerment, and Lucecita Benítez 343
  62. Can BET Make You Black? Remixing and Reshaping Latin@s on Black Entertainment Television 358
  63. The Afro-Latino Connection: Can this group be the bridge to a broadbased Black-Hispanic alliance? 364
  64. VIII. Afro-Latin@s in the Hip Hop Zone
  65. Introduction 371
  66. Ghettocentricity, Blackness, and Pan-Latinidad 373
  67. Chicano Rap Roots: Afro-Mexico and Black-Brown Cultural Exchange 387
  68. The Rise and Fall of Reggaeton: From Daddy Yankee to Tego Calderón and Beyond 396
  69. Do Plátanos Go wit’ Collard Greens? 404
  70. Divas Don’t Yield 411
  71. IX. Living Afro-Latinidades
  72. Introduction 415
  73. An Afro-Latina’s Quest for Inclusion 417
  74. Retracing Migration: From Samaná to New York and Back Again 422
  75. Negotiating among Invisibilities: Tales of Afro-Latinidades in the United States 426
  76. We Are Black Too: Experiences of a Honduran Garifuna 431
  77. Profile of an Afro-Latina: Black, Mexican, Both 434
  78. Enrique Patterson: Black Cuban Intellectual in Cuban Miami 439
  79. Reflections about Race by a Negrito Acomplejao 445
  80. Divisible Blackness: Reflections on Heterogeneity and Racial Identity 453
  81. Nigger-Reecan Blues 467
  82. X. Afro-Latin@s: Present and Future Tenses
  83. Introduction 469
  84. How Race Counts for Hispanic Americans 471
  85. Bleach in the Rainbow: Latino Ethnicity and Preference for Whiteness 485
  86. Brown Like Me? 499
  87. Against the Myth of Racial Harmony in Puerto Rico 508
  88. Mexican Ways, African Roots 512
  89. Afro-Latin@s and the Latin@ Workplace 520
  90. Racial Politics in Multiethnic America: Black and Latin@ Identities and Coalitions 527
  91. Afro-Latinism in United States Society: A Commentary 540
  92. Sources and Permissions 547
  93. Contributors 551
  94. Index 559
Heruntergeladen am 21.9.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9780822391319-021/html
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