Image Logo for Latin American Institute

Atlantic Colloquium: A Dialogue on Pan-Africanism

Organized by the UCLA Department of History | Thursday, Oct. 16 | 12 PM | Bunche Hall, Rm 6275

Atlantic Colloquium: A Dialogue on Pan-Africanism



RSVP HERE 

 

Thursday October 16th

“A Dialogue on Pan-Africanism”

Location: Bunche 6275.

Time: 12:00PM - 2:00PM (PST).

Please RSVP here, lunch will be provided. 

 Speakers:

Félix Jean Louis III, 

Assistant Professor, Department of History, University of California, Irvine

Paper: “Haiti, Haitians, and the Caribbean Roots of Pan-Africanism”

 Bright Gyamfi 

Assistant Professor, Department of History, Rutgers University

Paper: “Pan-Africanism and African and Diasporic unity”

Nana Osei-Ipare (Discussant)

Assistant Professor, Department of History and Center for African & African American Studies, Rice University  

 

Wednesday November 5th

“Territoriality and Freedom in the Bush: A Community-Focused Archaeology of Marronage in Colonial Dominica”.

Location: Bunche 6275.

Time: 12:00PM - 2:00PM (PST).

Speaker:

Jonathan Rodriguez

McKnight Doctoral Fellow

Dept. of Anthropology, University of South Florida

Paper: 

Justin Dunnavant (Discussant)

Assistant Professor, Dept. of Anthropology, UCLA 

 

In British colonial Dominica from 1763 to 1834, Maroons resisted enslavement by establishing fugitive geographies of resistance in the mountainous hinterlands of the island. The physical landscape of the island afforded Maroons a space to create communities, survive in the rainforests, and resist European colonialism and enslavement. This geospatial analysis of refuge settlements illustrates how Maroon geographies and Black ecologies within the untamed interior of Dominica disrupted cartographical concepts of European settler colonialism based on order, hierarchy, and exploitation. Most importantly, this legacy of fugitive spatial methods and ecological practices was later employed by Rastafarians during the oppressive era of the Dread Act. After discussing the regional study, I shift to the site-based survey highlighting the results of the community-based archaeological and digital heritage project at Jacko Flats. Jacko Flats is located near the rural village of Belles in the Central Forest Reserve, and its place name signifies the location of a Maroon settlement occupied by self-emancipated formerly enslaved Africans under the leadership of Chief Jacko from 1764 to 1814. The archaeological project at Jacko Flats embraced this idea of creating community by collaborating with the Create Caribbean Research Institute at Dominica State College, self-identified Dominican Maroon descendants, local scholars and interested site visitors, and Rastafarians. The results of the community-based archaeological project demonstrate how prioritizing collaboration facilitated the inclusion of interpretations of the site that are often neglected. I also reflect on the challenges and solutions for developing a community-focused archaeology project in the isolated hinterlands of Dominica. 

Biography: Jonathan Rodriguez is a McKnight Doctoral Fellow in the department of Anthropology at the University of South Florida. In 2023, he received a Fulbright U.S. Student Research grant to teach digital heritage methodologies to interns at Create Caribbean Research Institute and to conduct the first archaeological investigation of a Maroon settlement on the Caribbean island of Dominica. His research interests include historical archaeology, Caribbean archaeology, Geographic Information Science and digital heritage research, and Maroon studies.