Travel Reference
In-Depth Information
62. Abdala and Alexandre, Canudos ; Della Cava, “Brazilian Messianism and National Institutions”;
Levine, “Mud-Hut Jerusalem”; Levine, Vale of Tears ; Moniz, Canudos: Guerra social ; Moniz, Ca-
nudos, a luta pela terra ; Nogueira, Antônio Conselheiro e Canudos ; Sola, Canudos .
63. Miller, Way of Death ; Thornton, Warfare in Atlantic Africa.
64. Thornton, Warfare in Atlantic Africa.
65. This literature is extensive, but see Anderson, “ Quilombo of Palmares”; Péret and Henriquez,
Quilombo de Palmares ; Schwartz, “Black Slaves in Palmares”; Fiabani, Mato, Palhoça e Pilão ;
Gomes, Hidra e os pântanos ; Moura, Quilombos e a rebelião negra .
66. Hill, History, Power, and Identity ; Restall, Beyond Black and Red ; Schwartz, “New Peoples and
New Kinds of People,” in Salomon and Schwartz, eds., Cambridge History of Native Peoples of the
Americas ; Schwartz and Langfur, “Tapahuns, Negros da Terra and Curibocas”; Whitehead, “Black
Read as Red,” in Restall, ed., Beyond Black and Red .
67. Schwartz, “Cantos e quilombos numa conspiração de escravos haussas,” in Reis, ed., Liberdade
por um Fio .
68. Why people revolt (or do not) is one of the central questions of Latin American social history.
Slave uprisings and quilombos are very dynamic research areas within Brazilian historiography. See
Reis, Slave Rebellion in Brazil ; Gomes, Hidra e os pântanos ; Moura, Quilombos e a rebelião negra ;
Moura, Quilombos ; Silberling, “Displacement and Quilombos .”
69. Scott, Moral Economy of the Peasant ; Scott, Weapons of the Weak .
70. Price, First-Time .
71. Barickman, “Bit of Land Which They Call Roça”; da Cunha and Gomes, Quase-cidadão ;
Gomes, Histórias de quilombolas .
72. Landes, City of Women ; Merrell, Capoeira and Candomblé ; Voeks, Sacred Leaves of Can-
domblé .
73. Araújo dos Anjos, Territórios das communidades ; Barbosa, Silva, and Silvério, De preto a afro-
descendente ; Barbosa, Negros e quilombos em Minas Gerais ; French, “Buried Alive in the Northeast”;
Gomes, Hidra e os pântanos ; Moura, Quilombos na dinâmica social do Brasil ; Reis and Gomes, Liber-
dade por um fio .
74. Wagner de Almeida, “Terra do Preto.”
75. Scott, Moral Economy of the Peasant .
76. Da Cunha notes that after mass the sertanejos would go off to a terreiro for observance of more
rousing Candomblé rituals. See Rebellion in the Backlands , 112.
77. Treccani, Territórios quilombolas .
78. Marin and Castro, Negros do Trombetas ; Coudreau, Voyage au Trombetas .
79. Silberling, “Displacement and Quilombos .”
80. Dantas, Fronteiras moveçidas .
81. Sampaio, Canudos: Cartas para o Barão.
82. Da Cunha, Rebellion in the Backlands , 143.
83. Ibid., 161.
84. See Sampaio, Canudos: Cartas para o Barão , especially the letter from Jemoabo's cousin José
Americo (February 28, 1894): “those miserable people—everyone who was a slave, all the criminals
from every province . . . it's he (Antonio) who makes the laws, creates armies and does what ever he
pleases.”
85. Barbosa, Silva, and Silvério, De preto a afro-descendente ; Fiabani, Mato, palhoça e pilão;
Gomes, Hidra e os pântanos ; Moura, Quilombos na dinâmica social do Brasil .
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