Black Catholic Worlds: Religious Geographies of Eighteenth-Century Afro-Colombia

Research output: Book/ReportAuthored book

Abstract

Centring the lived experiences of enslaved and free people of colour, Black Catholic Worlds illustrates how geographies and mobilities – between continents, oceans, and region – were at the heart of the formation and circulation of religious cultures by people of African descent in the face of racialisation and slavery. This book examines black Catholicism in different sites – towns, mines, haciendas, rochelas, and maroon communities – across New Granada, and frames African-descended religions in the region as “interstitial religions.” People of African descent engaged in religious practice and knowledge production in the interstices, in liminal places and spaces that were physical sites but also figurative openings, in a society shaped by slavery. Bringing together fleeting moments from colonial archives, Fisk traces black religious knowledge production and sacramental practice just as gold, mined by enslaved people, again began to flow from the Pacific coast to the Atlantic world.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages308
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 28 Aug 2025

Publication series

NameAfro-Latin American Studies
PublisherCambridge University Press
ISSN (Print)009543538
ISSN (Electronic)0954-3576

Keywords

  • Slavery
  • Colombia
  • Catholicism
  • New Granada
  • Caribbean
  • Pacific
  • Black religion
  • Mobilities
  • Transculturation
  • Cultural geographies

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