Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.ufba.br/handle/ri/15447
metadata.dc.type: Artigo de Periódico
Title: Batuque: African drumming and dance between repression and concession, Bahia, 1808–1855
Other Titles: Bulletin of Latin American Research
Authors: Reis, João José
metadata.dc.creator: Reis, João José
Abstract: In this essay I will discuss some of the meanings acquired by black revelry under slavery. Given the restrictions of the available sources, I discuss above all the attitudes and the views of masters, policemen, journalists and politicians towards the batuque. For this reason I have chosen those festive manifestations which are more African or seen as such by these individuals. I intend to point out particularly what changed and what did not during the first half of the nineteenth century in attitudes towards the batuque, which here generally means black percussion music usually accompanied by dance.
Keywords: Slave revelry
Nineteenth-century Brazil
Repression and tolerance
metadata.dc.rights: Acesso Aberto
URI: http://repositorio.ufba.br/ri/handle/ri/15447
Issue Date: 2005
Appears in Collections:Artigo Publicado em Periódico (PPGH)

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