Blackness and Heathenism. Color, Theology, and Race in the Portuguese World, c. 1450-1600

The coexistence of a process of hierarchy and discrimination among human groups alongside dynamics of cultural and social hybridization in the Portuguese world in the early modern age has led to an intense historiographical debate. This article aims to contribute to extending our perspectives, focu...

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Main Author: Giuseppe Marcocci
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad Nacional de Colombia 2016-07-01
Series:Anuario Colombiano de Historia Social y de la Cultura
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/achsc/article/view/59068
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spelling doaj-20413770f9724288822757601ed87b782021-05-28T23:32:47ZengUniversidad Nacional de ColombiaAnuario Colombiano de Historia Social y de la Cultura0120-24562256-56472016-07-0143210.15446/achsc.v43n2.5906843549Blackness and Heathenism. Color, Theology, and Race in the Portuguese World, c. 1450-1600Giuseppe Marcocci The coexistence of a process of hierarchy and discrimination among human groups alongside dynamics of cultural and social hybridization in the Portuguese world in the early modern age has led to an intense historiographical debate. This article aims to contribute to extending our perspectives, focusing on the circulation of two global categories of classification: negro (Black) and gentio (Heathen) between the mid-fifteenth and late-sixteenth century. In particular, it explores the intersections between the perception of skin color and the reworking of theological concepts in a biologizing direction, which ran parallel to the development of an anti-Jewish theory based on blood purity. The line of enquiry leads from the coasts of West Africa, where it immediately meets the problem of slavery, to Brazil, via South Asia. The intense cross-fertilization of the categories of negro and gentio in the Portuguese world provides us with an alternative geography and institutional process of racialization to that of the Spanish Empire. https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/achsc/article/view/59068Black africansheathensconversosPortuguese Empirejewsslavery
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Giuseppe Marcocci
spellingShingle Giuseppe Marcocci
Blackness and Heathenism. Color, Theology, and Race in the Portuguese World, c. 1450-1600
Anuario Colombiano de Historia Social y de la Cultura
Black africans
heathens
conversos
Portuguese Empire
jews
slavery
author_facet Giuseppe Marcocci
author_sort Giuseppe Marcocci
title Blackness and Heathenism. Color, Theology, and Race in the Portuguese World, c. 1450-1600
title_short Blackness and Heathenism. Color, Theology, and Race in the Portuguese World, c. 1450-1600
title_full Blackness and Heathenism. Color, Theology, and Race in the Portuguese World, c. 1450-1600
title_fullStr Blackness and Heathenism. Color, Theology, and Race in the Portuguese World, c. 1450-1600
title_full_unstemmed Blackness and Heathenism. Color, Theology, and Race in the Portuguese World, c. 1450-1600
title_sort blackness and heathenism. color, theology, and race in the portuguese world, c. 1450-1600
publisher Universidad Nacional de Colombia
series Anuario Colombiano de Historia Social y de la Cultura
issn 0120-2456
2256-5647
publishDate 2016-07-01
description The coexistence of a process of hierarchy and discrimination among human groups alongside dynamics of cultural and social hybridization in the Portuguese world in the early modern age has led to an intense historiographical debate. This article aims to contribute to extending our perspectives, focusing on the circulation of two global categories of classification: negro (Black) and gentio (Heathen) between the mid-fifteenth and late-sixteenth century. In particular, it explores the intersections between the perception of skin color and the reworking of theological concepts in a biologizing direction, which ran parallel to the development of an anti-Jewish theory based on blood purity. The line of enquiry leads from the coasts of West Africa, where it immediately meets the problem of slavery, to Brazil, via South Asia. The intense cross-fertilization of the categories of negro and gentio in the Portuguese world provides us with an alternative geography and institutional process of racialization to that of the Spanish Empire.
topic Black africans
heathens
conversos
Portuguese Empire
jews
slavery
url https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/achsc/article/view/59068
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