
Contents
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Brazil in the African American Imaginary Brazil in the African American Imaginary
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Origin of African American Roots Tourism in Brazil: The 1978 New World Festival of the African Diaspora Origin of African American Roots Tourism in Brazil: The 1978 New World Festival of the African Diaspora
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Identifying the Roots Tourists Identifying the Roots Tourists
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The Map of Africanness The Map of Africanness
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From the Pain of Dark Tourism to the Joy of Finding One’s People From the Pain of Dark Tourism to the Joy of Finding One’s People
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Conclusion Conclusion
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One That’s My Face: African American Reflections on Brazil
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Published:December 2018
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Abstract
This chapter contextualizes African American roots tourism in Brazil both time-wise and space-wise. First, it locates the brief history of African American roots tourism within the longer trajectory of the meanings of Brazil for African Americans, spanning from the late nineteenth century—when, inspired by fantastical imaginings of Brazil as a “racial paradise,” groups of African Americans attempted to migrate there—to the present-day, when the country has become an important roots tourism destination. Second, the chapter compares representations of Brazil with those of other countries frequently visited by African American roots tourists, placing them within a wider system of meanings that the author defines as the “map of Africanness,” a map that is both spatial and temporal.
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