Call for papers for the Dossier "Modern slavery and the Luso-Brazilian institutions between the 17th and 19th centuries".

2024-02-28

After some time of heated discussions about whether violence is the structural element of slave domination or not, a group of historians, composed of Brazilians and some Brazilianists, dedicated to understanding different facets of the daily life of Africans and descendants who lived as slaves in the former Portuguese colony of America and later in the Empire of Brazil, undertook numerous studies marked by approaches that favored analyses quite defined in space and time, in which the slave often assumed a preponderant role over slavery itself. Except for some exceptions, notarial, police, and judicial documentation relating to the captives was frequented more as a means of reaching the day-to-day of those involved than for the study of the state apparatus that gave it form and legality.

More recently, however, over the last two decades, even if we consider that localized studies have still achieved considerable expression, there has been in Brazil, the Caribbean, and the United States a renewed interest in macro approaches, both in the publication of new research and in the production of translations of established works - which have made available to a broader number of interested parties issues that were, for some time, relegated to the background, forgotten under the stigma of large ideological, economistic, or culturalist generalizations. Gradually, the history of modern slavery is being, in Brazil and abroad, reinterpreted in the light of connected histories in the American space, from the Atlantic perspective, under the prism of the Portuguese empire, and within the scope of Western culture itself.

Positioning itself at the same time as a tributary and critic of these broad historiographical movements, this thematic dossier intends to open space to a new and vibrant set of studies that have been articulating the problem of slavery of Africans and descendants to the construction or functioning of institutions that made up the Lusitanian Monarchy and the State of the Empire of Brazil between the 17th and 19th centuries. Thus, investigations around the impacts of slavery on institutions linked to monarchical governments and the State itself, such as: the Secular and Episcopal Courts, the Holy Office, the Administrative and Advisory Councils, the Assemblies, the Administrative and Parliamentary Chambers, the Police, the Jury, among other bodies that, in this broad time span, contributed through their practices and members to the establishment of the long debate on the Slavery and State binomial in the Luso-Brazilian world, are welcome. Studies that explore the prescriptions and attributes conferred to slavery or the daily conducts of masters, slaves, and freedmen by institutions in these centuries are also of interest. We believe that shedding light on such approaches can bring new contributions and stimulating discussions to the debate on a topic that, in the last half-century, has been marked by controversy and constant interpretative renewals, with impacts on the writing of history in Brazil and abroad.