Marjoleine Kars: Freedom Marooned
An Atlantic Slave Rebellion in the Dutch Caribbean
Location
Library and Gallery, Albin O. Kuhn
Date & Time
December 2, 2015, 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm
Description
Marjoleine Kars, Chair, Associate Professor of History and Dresher Center Fellow, UMBC
In
1763-1764, five thousand slaves in the Dutch colony of Berbice in South
America revolted. The Berbice rebellion’s extraordinary judicial
records allow an examination of the internal dynamics of rebellion.
Mapping the politics among the enslaved, rather than merely their
interactions with European colonists, shines a light on the many
Afro-Berbicians who, eager to remain both master-less and alive,
struggled to dodge all combatants, whether Dutch and their Amerindian
allies, or rebels. Their inventive coping strategies, not commonly
examined in slave rebellions, suggest that historians’ usual binaries of
freedom and slavery, or “rebellious” and “loyal,” simplify complex
dynamics. The Berbice rebellion clues us in to the existence of
alternative, and competing, notions of what life beyond European slavery
might look like. Focusing on the internal dynamics also exposes the
importance of gender. The available evidence suggests that while men and
women shared much in the rebellion, their experiences also powerfully
diverged. For women, rebellion proved much less liberating than we have
assumed. This talk, then, examines a major slave rebellion from the
bottom up, yielding new understandings of insurgency.
Bio:
Marjoleine
Kars, Associate Professor of History and Chair, UMBC, is finishing a
book about the slave rebellion in Berbice. An article about the role of
gender in the Berbice rebellion will appear in early 2016 in the American Historical Review. She has previously written a book about a farmers’ rebellion in pre-revolutionary North Carolina: “Breaking Loose Together”: The Regulator Rebellion in Pre-Revolutionary North Carolina (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2002). She was a Dresher Center fellow in spring 2015.
Sponsored by the Dresher Center for the Humanities and the History Department.
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