Joseph C. Miller Memorial Lecture by Rachel Sarah O’Toole
How did enslaved individuals in the Americas navigate the path to freedom?
Focusing on Trujillo, Peru, this lecture contends that legal manumission alone did not guarantee freedom. Instead, it argues that enslaved individuals, particularly in 17th-century Trujillo, strategically combined debt and manumission agreements. Analyzing notarial records, the study shows how these individuals, following the examples of scholars like Kathryn Burns and others, used the public recording of debt to assert financial autonomy and reputational responsibility. Enslaved men positioned themselves as providers in patriarchal roles, while women used debt agreements to claim municipal subjectivity and honorable casta identities. This dual strategy was a conscious step toward freedom in a gendered context.
Focusing on Trujillo, Peru, this lecture contends that legal manumission alone did not guarantee freedom. Instead, it argues that enslaved individuals, particularly in 17th-century Trujillo, strategically combined debt and manumission agreements. Analyzing notarial records, the study shows how these individuals, following the examples of scholars like Kathryn Burns and others, used the public recording of debt to assert financial autonomy and reputational responsibility. Enslaved men positioned themselves as providers in patriarchal roles, while women used debt agreements to claim municipal subjectivity and honorable casta identities. This dual strategy was a conscious step toward freedom in a gendered context.
Zeit
Montag, 04.12.23 - 16:15 Uhr
- 18:00 Uhr
Themengebiet
Practicing Debt and Transforming Freedom in Colonial Peru
Zielgruppen
Wissenschaftler*innen
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Studierende
Sprachen
English
Ort
Onlina via Zoom
Reservierung
nicht erforderlich
Veranstalter
BCDSS
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