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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Rafael OcasioPublisher: Lexington Books Imprint: Lexington Books Dimensions: Width: 15.50cm , Height: 1.70cm , Length: 22.00cm Weight: 0.404kg ISBN: 9781498562652ISBN 10: 1498562655 Pages: 306 Publication Date: 15 July 2021 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsAcknowledgements Note about Citations of George Howe’s Diary Introduction: George Howe: A Testimonial Documentation of a Bristolian-Owned Ingenio in the Province of Matanzas Chapter 1: Bristolian-Owned Ingenios in the province of Matanzas: George Howe’s Sugar Cane Plantation Diary Chapter 2: Memorializing the Province of Matanzas: A Rural View of the Wildness Chapter 3: A Plantation Diary: Work Sketches of a Bristolian-Owned Cuban Sugar Cane Ingenio Chapter 4: The Embodiment of Slavery: Documenting the Work Underpinnings of an Enslaved Crew-Operated Cuban Ingenio Chapter 5: Cuban Ingenios as an Artistic Inspiration: George Howe as a Writer and Painter of Plantation Work Customs Conclusion: The Narrative of a Bristolian-Owned Cuban Ingenio: Silences and Intentional Omissions Epilogue: Revolutionary Ideology and Afro-Cuban Icons: Representation of Racial Dynamics in Cuba Today BibliographyReviewsThe book offers a deep dive into a little-known diary. It adds to the burgeoning literature on the dark and deep connection of slavery that bound Bristol, Rhode Island and Cuba together. -- C. V. Carrington-Farmer, Roger Williams University Diarist, naturalist, poet, painter, and prolific letter writer, George Howe was a man of many parts. He was also the manager of a Cuban slave plantation at the height of the island's sugar boom. In this work of historical recovery and literary analysis, Rafael Ocasio brings Howe and his long forgotten, utterly unclassifiable oeuvre back to life. -- James T. Campbell, Stanford University Rafael Ocasio provides for us a thorough examination of the popular nineteenth century artistic travelogue opening our understanding of the critical relationship between Rhode Island and Cuba during the slaving era. Ocasio's book will be the go-to book on slaving for all interested in the aesthetics of the nineteenth century bringing alive an otherwise hidden history. -- Autumn Quezada-Grant, Roger Williams University Ocasio brings to life not only the American encounter with colonial Cuba, and the business practices of the ingenios, but also the labor demanded of the enslaved themselves and, through a close reading of this literary text, how a New Englander navigated the glaring contradictions between the highly profitable exploitation of enslaved labor (and the illegal slave trade closely tied to it) and complicity with that system's inherent inhumanity and brutality. -- James DeWolf Perry, editor (with Kristin Gallas) of Interpreting Slavery at Museums and Historic Sites The book offers a deep dive into a little-known diary. It adds to the burgeoning literature on the dark and deep connection of slavery that bound Bristol, Rhode Island and Cuba together. -- C. V. Carrington-Farmer, Roger Williams University Diarist, naturalist, poet, painter, and prolific letter writer, George Howe was a man of many parts. He was also the manager of a Cuban slave plantation at the height of the island’s sugar boom. In this work of historical recovery and literary analysis, Rafael Ocasio brings Howe and his long forgotten, utterly unclassifiable oeuvre back to life. -- James T. Campbell, Stanford University Rafael Ocasio provides for us a thorough examination of the popular nineteenth century artistic travelogue opening our understanding of the critical relationship between Rhode Island and Cuba during the slaving era. Ocasio’s book will be the go-to book on slaving for all interested in the aesthetics of the nineteenth century bringing alive an otherwise hidden history. -- Autumn Quezada-Grant, Roger Williams University Ocasio brings to life not only the American encounter with colonial Cuba, and the business practices of the ingenios, but also the labor demanded of the enslaved themselves and, through a close reading of this literary text, how a New Englander navigated the glaring contradictions between the highly profitable exploitation of enslaved labor (and the illegal slave trade closely tied to it) and complicity with that system’s inherent inhumanity and brutality. -- James DeWolf Perry, editor (with Kristin Gallas) of Interpreting Slavery at Museums and Historic Sites Author InformationRafael Ocasio is Charles A. Dana Professor of Spanish at Agnes Scott College. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |