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INDIVIDUALISING THE ATLANTIC SLAVE TRADE: THE BIOGRAPHY OF MAHOMMAH GARDO BAQUAQUA OF DJOUGOU (1854)1
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 November 2002
Abstract
Recent quantitative studies of the Atlantic slave trade tend to marginalise the voices of the enslaved and transported Africans who were its victims, but some sense of their experience is provided by surviving narratives by African-born ex-slaves. This essay draws attention to a neglected example of such narratives, the biography (published in the USA, 1854) of Mahommah Gardo Baquaqua, from Djougou (in modern Bénin), who was enslaved and exported to Brazil in 1845. It explores some of the problems of interpretation raised by this text, especially the relationship between Baquaqua's Muslim upbringing and his conversion to Christianity in the Diaspora.
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- Copyright © Royal Historical Society2002
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1 The paper was written while the author held a Lady Davis Visiting Professorship, in conjunction with a Visiting Fellowship in the Harry S. Truman Research Institute for the Advancement of Peace, at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel, during the academic session 2000/1; thanks to these institutions for their hospitality and support.
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