Le prix littéraire Fetkann ! Maryse Condé 2023 attribué à Marie-Jeanne Rossignol

Le CIRESC a le plaisir d’annoncer que le prix Fetkann! Maryse Condé 2023 “Mémoire des pays du Sud/Mémoire de l’humanité” (catégorie Recherche) a été attribué à Marie-Jeanne Rossignol pour son ouvrage Noirs et blancs contre l’esclavage : une alliance antiesclavagiste ambiguë aux Etats-Unis 1754-1830″ publié en 2022 dans la collection “Esclavages” CIRESC chez Karthala.

La remise du prix a eu lieu le 23 novembre 2023 au café de Flore.

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2023-12-03T21:12:20+01:00Catégories : DISTINCTION|

Bourse Marie Curie pour Giulia Bonazza

Le CIRESC a le plaisir de vous annoncer que Giulia Bonazza, ancienne doctorante du CIRESC, vient d’obtenir la bourse Marie Curie pour son projet de recherche “The Darker Shades of Black. The Value of Skin Colour in the Mediterranean and Atlantic Slave and Labour Markets, 1750-1886”.

Giulia Bonazza séjournera 2 ans à la Columbia University à New York et 1 an à l’université Ca’ Foscari à Venise.

Présentation du projet

The Darker Shades of Black proposes a new approach to the problem of race, a connected and global history which gives skin colour a fundamental role in determining the economic value of captives, slaves and free men of colour in the century of abolition. The objective is to examine how the skin colour of captives, slaves, serfs, workers on galleys and sex workers affected their value in economic transactions before and after the legal abolition of slavery in the period 1750-1886. The value of captives and slaves in the Mediterranean and the Atlantic changed according to the qualities they were assigned. My hypothesis is that skin colour and shades thereof were a major factor in influencing both the slaves’ exchange value and the salary level of free workers. I want to find out from the sources whether there was a correlation between the market price of slaves and the skin colour that was attributed to them by vendors, buyers and intermediaries. If confirmed, the colour black and its shades established a form of differentiation or discrimination among the workforce. I will compare experiences in countries of the Southern Mediterranean with those in the colonies of the French and Spanish Empires. For the Mediterranean, my case studies focus on the Italian area, France and Spain, and on Cuba and the French Antilles for the Atlantic. The period chosen allows analysis of, first, a period of growth in the trafficking of slaves and captives on the Mediterranean coasts, during and after the decline of the Atlantic trade, and then the consequence of the abolitions of slavery within geographical spaces characterised by accelerating mobility of persons of colour with different juridical statuses. Shades of Black entails the first study of the connection between the economic value and the physical appearance of slaves. The overall objective is implementing the first comprehensive examination of how shades of skin colour influenced the negotiation of the price at which a slave was traded.

Plus d’informations sur le site de “la Repubblica”

2020-07-07T17:38:00+02:00Catégories : DISTINCTION|

Remise du prix de thèse Jean Favier à Sakiko Nakao

Inauguration du Mémorial de l'abolition de l'esclavage de Nantes, le 25 mars 2012.

Nous avons l’honneur d’annoncer que Sakiko Nakao a reçu le prix de thèse Jean Favier 2018 ce samedi 30 mars. Ce prix est décerné par la Société des Amis des Archives de France.

Thèse

Définir l’« Afrique » entre Panafricanisme et Nationalisme en Afrique de l’Ouest. Analyses à travers les transformations sociales au Sénégal, en Haute-Volta et au Ghana, au temps de la décolonisation (1945-1962),

Direction

Myriam Cottias

2020-07-10T13:02:54+02:00Catégories : DISTINCTION|
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