Manuel Raimundo Querino (1851-1923)

This blog is dedicated to the life, works and causes of Manuel Querino, a Brazilian art historian, folklorist, ethnographer, African vindicationist, abolitionist, crusading journalist, politician, educator and labour leader, and one of Brazil's first black vindicationists

11/12/2010

Visualizing Slavery - NYTimes.com

Visualizing Slavery - NYTimes.com
Posted by Sabrina Gledhill at 10:05

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Newer Post Older Post Home
Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Manuel Querino

Manuel Querino
Photo from collection of Sabrina Gledhill

About Manuel Querino

ln a racial climate that was at best condescending and at worst genocidal toward blacks, Manuel Querino helped pioneer the study of the Afro-Brazilians and their culture.

This blog is dedicated to the life, work and causes of this African-Brazilian scholar. The importance of his pioneering efforts in the study of Afro-Brazilian culture can only be understood in the perspective of the environment of pseudoscientific racism in which all intellectuals lived in nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Brazil.

By recognizing the contributions of Africans and their descendants to Brazil's national identity and culture, even a Brazilian "race," Querino displayed phenomenal independence of scholarship and mind. He defied the influence of European pseudoscientific racism in a country whose economy was partially based on racial slavery until 1888. Like most Brazilian intellectuals, Querino was seeking to provide a scientific or historical basis for a founding myth of Brazilian nationality and culture: in searching for the characteristic that gave their country and people their unique identity, he chose the fait accompli and undeniable fact of widespread cultural and biological miscegenation.

Manuel Querino - Brazil's first Black vindicationist

Promote your Page too

Links to more information on Querino

  • Timeline for Manuel Querino
  • Blog sobre Querino em português

Poster for Seminar on Manuel Querino

Poster for Seminar on Manuel Querino
August 25-29, 2008 at the Instituto Geográfico e Histórico da Bahia

Quotations

  • > "Here it was the work of blacks that sustained the nobility and prosperity of Brazil for centuries, without fail; it was as a result of their work that we have scientific institutions, letters, arts, commerce, industry, etc. Therefore, they have played an outstanding role as a factor in Brazilian civilization.” - Manuel Querino
  • > "Brazil has two great glories: the bounty of its soil and the talent of the mestiço." - Manuel Querino
  • > "The generosity of the human spirit can overcome all adversity. Through compassion and caring, we create...hope." - Nelson Mandela
  • > "The moral arc of the universe is long, but it bends towards justice." - Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.
  • > "Until the lion writes his own story, the tale of the hunt will always glorify the hunter." - African proverb
  • > "It is a peculiar sensation, this double-consciousness, this sense of always looking at one's self through the eyes of others.... One ever feels his twoness, - an American, a Negro; two souls, two thoughts, two unreconciled strivings; two warring ideals in one dark body, whose dogged strength alone keeps it from being torn asunder." - W.E.B. DuBois
  • > "From a genetic perspective, all humans are Africans, either residing in Africa or in recent exile." - Svante Pääbo (Swedish biologist specialized in evolutionary genetics)
  • > "There is no power on earth that can neutralize the influence of a high, simple and useful life." - Booker T. Washington
  • > "We have to recognize that the price of equality in pluralism, like the price of liberty, is eternal vigilance." - Carl N. Degler

Querinophiles and Querinologists

Several scholars have focussed on Querino in works published and produced in Brazil and the US over the past few decades, including Jorge Calmon, Pedro Calmon, E. Bradford Burns, Jaime Nascimento, Jaime Sodré, Maria das Graças Andrade Leal, David Brookshaw, Emanoel Araújo, Luiz Alberto Ribeiro Freire, Eliane Nunes, Kim Butler, Vivaldo da Costa Lima, Antonio Sergio Alfredo Guimarães and Waldeloir Rego. The greatest "Querinophile" of all was Jorge Amado, who drew inspiration from Querino's life and works when creating Pedro Archanjo, the protagonist of Tent of Miracles.

Blog Archive

  • ►  2011 (6)
    • ►  07 (1)
      • Everyday thoughts of an Olorisha in London
    • ►  05 (1)
      • Full Episode: Brazil, a Racial Paradise?
    • ►  04 (2)
      • Timeline - Black in Brazil
      • Haiti & the Dominican Republic: An Island Divided
    • ►  02 (1)
      • The cost of racism « Resist racism
    • ►  01 (1)
      • Black in Latin America Conference | W.E.B. Du Bois...
  • ▼  2010 (58)
    • ▼  12 (3)
      • What Progressives Don’t Understand About Obama - N...
      • Visualizing Slavery - NYTimes.com
      • The New Jim Crow
    • ►  11 (4)
      • Black Consciousness in Brazil
      • Interview with Sally Price
      • Let’s Rescue the Race Debate - NYTimes.com
      • Gilder Lehrman Center | Frederick Douglass Prize
    • ►  09 (1)
      • BBC News - Brazil's education challenge in bid to ...
    • ►  08 (5)
      • Brazil's census offers recognition at last to desc...
      • Op-Ed Columnist - Bob Herbert - Glenn Beck in Wash...
      • Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" speech
      • Seydou Keita: Photograph (1997.364) | Heilbrunn Ti...
      • African Influences in Modern Art | Thematic Essay ...
    • ►  07 (6)
      • Op-Ed Columnist - You’ll Never Believe What This W...
      • Color of Change: Tea Party Leaders Still Silent
      • Facebook | Festival of Yoruba Arts (F.O.Y.A)
      • Globalist - A World of Hope - Op-Ed - NYTimes.com
      • Op-Ed Columnist - Fourth of July 1776, 1964, 2010 ...
      • Displaced Black Landowners Fight to Reclaim Georgi...
    • ►  06 (1)
      • British Museum exhibition: The African sculptures ...
    • ►  05 (2)
      • BBC News - World News America - 'Unaccustomed' deb...
      • Whites only?
    • ►  04 (3)
      • Op-Ed Columnist - Welcome to Confederate History M...
      • Dr. King Said It: I'm Black and Beautiful!
      • No comment
    • ►  03 (9)
      • Book Review - The History of White People - By Nel...
      • A Game of Chess, by Adam Isler
      • Trailblazing paratrooper broke color barrier in se...
      • Museums Special Section - Haiti’s Visionaries, Ris...
      • Flash of the Spirit - a very special homily
      • BBC News - Lost Jewish tribe 'found in Zimbabwe'
      • YouTube - Parranderos de Loiza BUHOS CAFE Baila Le...
      • YouTube - Bomba en Loiza
      • African Continuities in the Americas
    • ►  02 (14)
      • Kingdom of Ife video › The British Museum
      • Kingdom of Ife | Art review | Art and design | gua...
      • The Quilts of Gees Bend
      • Sabrina Gledhill to Give Talk on Manuel Querino an...
      • Decoding Limbaugh: Hendrik Hertzberg : The New Yor...
      • Voodooists Attacked, Pelted With Rocks At Ceremony...
      • BBC News - Voodoo religion's role in helping Haiti...
      • BBC News - US renames Negrohead Mountain after bla...
      • BBC News - Racism still rife in Italian football
      • Nelson Mandela's historic steps to freedom retrace...
    • ►  01 (10)
  • ►  2009 (44)
    • ►  12 (3)
    • ►  11 (5)
    • ►  10 (1)
    • ►  09 (2)
    • ►  06 (2)
    • ►  05 (1)
    • ►  04 (5)
    • ►  03 (1)
    • ►  02 (10)
    • ►  01 (14)
  • ►  2008 (102)
    • ►  12 (11)
    • ►  11 (11)
    • ►  10 (7)
    • ►  09 (10)
    • ►  08 (18)
    • ►  07 (6)
    • ►  06 (7)
    • ►  05 (5)
    • ►  04 (14)
    • ►  03 (3)
    • ►  02 (4)
    • ►  01 (6)
  • ►  2007 (7)
    • ►  12 (2)
    • ►  04 (1)
    • ►  03 (4)
graphical counter
graphical counter

Quem sou eu/About me

My Photo
Sabrina Gledhill
Salvador, Bahia, Brazil
Website: 5star.com.br Sabrina is a British scholar, translator and writer who was raised in Puerto Rico and educated in the US and UK. She has lived in Salvador, Bahia since December 1986. MA in Latin American Studies (1986) from UCLA (areas: History, Anthropology and Political Science). PhD candidate in Ethnic and African Studies at CEAO/UFBA. Translator of over 30 books published in Brazil and the USA. // Pesquisadora, tradutora e escritora inglesa, criada em Porto Rico. Instrução superior na Inglaterra e nos EUA. Mestre em Estudos Latino-Americanos pela UCLA (História, Antropologia e Ciência Política). Doutoranda em Estudos Étnicos e Africanos no CEAO/UFBA. Radicada na Bahia desde 1986. Tradutora de mais de 30 livros, publicados no Brasil e nos EUA.
View my complete profile

Background

My interest in Manuel Querino began when I was studying for my MA in Latin American Studies at UCLA in the early 1980s. After reading Jorge Amado's Tent of Miracles, I learned that the protagonist was largely inspired by Querino's life and works. My MA advisor, the late E. Bradford Burns, shared my interest in Querino and urged me to write his biography. It has taken me a long time to get around to it - I moved to Brazil shortly after graduating in 1986 and have spent the last 20-odd years making a living as a translator and raising my family. In addition to researching Querino's life and Brazilian race relations in general, I am also working towards a PhD in Ethnic Studies at CEAO/UFBA, focusing on the intellectual history of the African diaspora through two figures: Manuel R. Querino and Booker T. Washington. Suggestions and/or critiques will be warmly and gratefully welcomed.

-- Sabrina Gledhill

Simple template. Powered by Blogger.