This article examines the political impact of slave activism in Brazil and Cuba from 1790 to 1825, covering the period from the beginning of the Revolution of Saint-Domingue to the establishment of the Constitution of Brazil (1824) and the granting of absolute power to the captains general of Cuba (1825), in the immediate context of the end of the wars of independence on the continent. Instead of discussing and classifying the specific character of the different expressions of collective slave resistance in a typological order, this article tries to understand the effect of those actions on the macro-political dynamic of these two aspects by verifying to what extent they made up the political and institutional framework of slavery in Brazil and Cuba.
CITATION STYLE
Marquese, R., & Parron, T. (2011). Revolta escrava e política da escravidão: Brasil e Cuba, 1791-1825. Revista de Indias. https://doi.org/10.3989/revindias.2011.002
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