Ana Lucia Araujo to Moderate the Panel Discussion on Global Africa, Women, and Slavery, October 5, 2025

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Adebayo Ajadi

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Oct 3, 2025, 3:20:03 PM (11 days ago) Oct 3
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Ana Lucia Araujo to Moderate the Panel Discussion on Global Africa, Women, and Slavery, October 5, 2025

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Ana Lucia Araujo is a Professor of History at the historically Black Howard University in Washington DC. She specializes in the history and memory of slavery and the Atlantic slave trade and is particularly interested in the visual and material culture of slavery. She authored or edited more than fifteen books, and her most recent books include Reparations for Slavery and the Slave Trade: A Transnational and Comparative History (Bloomsbury 2023, second edition) and The Gift: How Objects of Prestige Shaped the Atlantic Slave Trade and Colonialism (Cambridge University Press, 2024). In 2025, she was awarded a John Solomon Guggenheim Fellowship. Her work has been recently supported by several fellowships, including the Institute for Advanced Study (Princeton, NJ) in 2022, and the Getty Research Institute in 2023. She is a member of the International Scientific Committee of the UNESCO Routes of Enslaved Peoples Project. Her latest book is Humans in Shackles: An Atlantic History of Slavery was published by the University of Chicago Press in 2024.

Please join us for a conversation with Africanist historian Toby Green, who will be in dialogue with six historians of global Africa and the African diaspora: Danielle Terrazas Williams, Hassoum Ceesay, Mariana P. Candido, José Lingna Nafafé, Robin Phylisia Chapdelaine, and Ana Lucia Araujo, who draw in his recent book The Heretic of Cacheu: Struggles over Life in a 17th-Century West African Port (Allen Lane and University of Chicago Press, 2025) to discuss the connections of West Africa with Europe, the Americas, and Asia during the era of the Atlantic slave trade. Using Green’s work as a framework, the panel will examine the role of West African religions and Catholicism in these exchanges and their importance in understanding this long and painful history. More than anything else, the speakers will consider the great variety of oral, material, and written archival sources, to address the central role of women in West African and Atlantic economies, as traders, healers, wives, mothers, and enslaved workers.

Sunday, October 5, 2025
11 AM Austin
12 PM Atlanta
4 PM Gambia
5 PM Nigeria

Register Here:

Join via Zoom:



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Adebayo Ajadi
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