ACH 55th Annual Conference PRE-CIRCULATED PAPERS

Paper Access Instructions

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Some identified abstracts are freely available without a password.

Panel 2: Migration and Colonization: Unsettled Archives

Rosemarijn Hoefte (KITLV/Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian Studies and Caribbean Studies): “Dutch research into the Colonial Past: A Tale of Two Cities”
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Elise A. Mitchell (Princeton University): “Smallpox and Slavery in the Early Modern Atlantic World: A Digital History”
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Nuala Zahedieh (University of Cambridge): “Canoes and capitalism: an indigenous technology in the early English Caribbean”
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Panel 3: Migration As A Breeding Ground for Resistance

Gelien Matthews (University of The West Indies, St. Augustine Campus): “Eliza Fenwick’s Private Account of the Barbados Servile War of 1816”
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Heather Freund (University of Copenhagen): “An Island Divided: Maroons, the Kalinago, and the British in St. Vincent”
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Gunvor Simonsen (University of Copenhagen): “A Business of Freedom? Marronage and Maritime Transport in the Nineteenth-Century Lesser Antilles”
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Panel 4: Circulation and Movement: Trade, Labor and Family Networks

Sebastian Gómez González (Universidad de Antioquia): “Alias ‘El Mompoxino’ y el negocio del contrabando en el istmo de Panamá y las Antillas, 1730-1746”
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Yevan Terrien (University of Louisiana at Lafayette): “Wheel of Misfortune: The Intercolonial Slave Trade between the Caribbean and Colonial Louisiana in the 18th century”
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Felicia Fricke (University of Copenhagen): “A Maritime Family Network at St. Barts, 1802-1829”
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Panel 5: New Research on Abolition: The Caribbean and West Africa

Suzanne Schwarz (University of Worcester): “Interrupted Middle Passages: Tracing the Movements and Identities of ‘Liberated Africans’ Released from Slave Ships Bound for the Caribbean, c. 1808-1819”
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Mégane Coulon (Susquehanna University): “Transatlantic Connections: The Caribbean and the Colony of Sierra Leone”
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Panel 6: Migration and Reversals of Belonging in the Caribbean Borderlands: Venezuela, Colombia, Panama, the Dominican Republic, and Garifuna New York, 1850s-Today

Lara Putnam (University of Pittsburgh): “Violence Against Afro-Caribbean Immigrants in Venezuela, 1850-1950: A Regional and Comparative Assessment”
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Sharika D. Crawford (United States Naval Academy): “From North End to Pañatown: How the Free Port and Tourism Sector Spurred Migration that Transformed the Colombian Island of San Andrés, 1953 -1972”
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Kaysha Corinealdi (Emerson College): “Denationalization in Comparative Perspective: Panama and the Dominican Republic (1941-Present)”
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Panel 7: Transnational Caribbean Actors and the Making of Blackness in the Greater Circum-Caribbean

Felix Jean-Louis (University of California): “Exporting the Revolution: Haitians and the Harlem Assemblages for Black Liberation, 1919-1934”
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Tyesha Maddox (Fordham University): “Friends of Abyssinia: West Indian Immigrant Mutual Aid Societies and the Impact of the Second Italo-Ethiopian War”
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Willie Mack (University of Missouri): “It was an attack on all of us’: Haitians and Black Americans in New York City and the Korean Grocer Boycott”
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J. Marlena Edwards (Pennsylvania State University): “An Unintended Modality: American Whaling, Labor, and Race-Making in New Bedford Massachusetts, 1870-1930”
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Panel 8: Accommodating Practices

Dexnell Peters (University of the West Indies, Mona Campus): “Religious pluralism, missionaries and the integration of the Greater Southern Caribbean in the Revolutionary Era”
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Kristen Block (University of Tennessee): “Medicinal Springs in the Early Caribbean: Creole Healing Stories at the Intersection of Medicine and Race”
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José Andrés Fernández Montes de Oca (University of Costa Rica): “West Indian Land Tenure in the Costa Rican Caribbean, 1870-1930”
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Laura De Moya-Guerra (Rutgers University): “The Chinese in the Barranquilla (Colombia) Carnival: Gender and Diplomacy 1960-1980”
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Panel 9: Reclaiming the Dutch Caribbean Space Within A Larger Regional Historical Context

Margo Groenewoud (Independent Scholar): “Dutch Caribbean Radicals and the Spaces they Claimed”
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Donate B. Philbert-Nieveld (University of Curaçao): “How regional and non-regional migration processes during the mid-nineteenth century influenced religious practices in the (Dutch) Caribbean”
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Raimie Richardson, Camiel de Kom, and Arminda Franken-Ruiz (Department of History and Heritage for the Public Entity of St. Eustatius): “Towards Accessibility: Empowering (Dutch) Caribbean communities with diasporic colonial collections”
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Panel 10: Rethinking Repatriation: Legacies of Colonial Collecting in the Caribbean

Shani Roper (University of the West Indies): “Repatriation, Colonial Collecting and its Impact on National Natural History collections in Jamaica”
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Arminda Franken-Ruiz (Independent Heritage Consultant): “The Return of Artifacts from Colonial Collections and its Effect on Museums and their Communities: The case of the National Archaeological Museum of Aruba and the Wereldmuseum in Leiden”
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Panel 11: Choices, Decisions and Policies In A Global Context of Changes

Diana Paton (University of Edinburgh) and Juanita de Barros (McMaster University): “Policing Public Space in Post-Slavery British Guiana, 1881-1897”
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Anasa Hicks (Florida State University): “Decolonial Decisions: Cuba’s Choice at the Outset of Angolan Independence”
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Joy D Lewis (Morgan State University): “The Two Virgin Islands: A Case Study in Transnational Interdependency”
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