HomePolitics & Social Sciences BooksThe Slave Ship Clotilda and the Making of AfricaTown, USA: Spirit of Our Ancestors
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The Slave Ship Clotilda and the Making of AfricaTown, USA: Spirit of Our Ancestors

hardcoverMarch 30, 2008
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ISBN-13: 9780275994914 ISBN-10: 0275994910
Publisher
Praeger
Binding
hardcover
Published
March 30, 2008
Weight
1.3 lbs
Dimensions
23.40×1.60×15.60 cm

About this book

The Slave Ship Clotilda and the Making of AfricaTown, USA: Spirit of Our Ancestors by Robertson, Natalie S.. hardcover edition. ISBN: 9780275994914.

Debates on reparations for slavery have emerged on national and international levels. However, much of the discourse centers on the legitimate slave trade. Few people are cognizant of the fact that the transatlantic slave trade consisted of both a legal trade and an illegal trade that began after January 1, 1808. Despite statutory prohibitions against slave smuggling, American citizens continued to smuggle African captives into the United States up to and beyond the threshold of the Civil War. The Slave Ship Clotilda and the Making of AfricaTown, USA is the only well-documented work of serious nonfiction that chronicles the transatlantic smuggling expedition of the slaver Clotilda during the slave trades illegal period, dramatizing the plight of her captives from the point of capture in the West African interior to the point of disembarkation in Mobile, Alabama in 1860, and tracing the specific means by which the captives triumphed over their tragedy. Thirty members of that fateful cargo established AfricaTown in Alabama, where many of their descendants still live. In 1927, Zora Neale Hurston interviewed Cudjo Kazoola, the last survivor of the Clotilda. In The Slave Ship Clotilda and the Making of AfricaTown, USA Natalie S. Robertson uses ethnography, cartography, linguistics, and oral history to connect the story of the Clotilda captives to their origins in Africa, through their ordeals on the middle passage, all the way to the issue of reparations in the present day. She incorporates indigenous African perspectives, Hurstons interviews, and sources such as the Clotildas log, meshing diverse voices into a narrative that reveals the centrality of slavery, Africanisms, and resistance in American culture even today.