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Ritual Observance: Colonial Representations of Afro-Caribbean Spiritual Practices in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century French Caribbean
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 February 2017
Abstract
Over the eighteenth century and into the nineteenth century, colonial observers repeatedly recorded Afro-Caribbean spiritual practices in the French Caribbean. “Ritual Observances” charts four such records; the 1698 journal of Jean Baptiste Labat, trial records from 1784, Moreau de-Saint Merie’s 1794 Description Topographique, and Drouin De Bercy’s De Saint Domingue. Although these records span distinct historical periods and textual mediums, they all employ a set of recognizable forms to express the convergence of disgust and desire that have historically attended colonial observations of Afro-Caribbean agency. I argue, however, that the significance of this ambivalence is constitutive of the historical moment in which it appears and that these observations are connected by more than a “shared” ambivalence. Instead, we might categorize these records as themselves ritualistic. The term ritual observance gestures to the act of observing a ritual, but also the way in which the observation is itself ritualistic. The repeated and sequential forms, or “actions” as I term them, of the ritual observance work to inscribe a legible history over the turbulence of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century French colonialism.
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- Cambridge Journal of Postcolonial Literary Inquiry , Volume 4 , Special Issue 1: Special Issue: Postcolonial Reading Publics , January 2017 , pp. 127 - 141
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- © Cambridge University Press 2017
References
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2 He writes that “between the first slave shipments of the early 1500s and the 1791 insurrection of northern Saint-Domingue, most Western observers treated manifestations of slave resistance and defiance with the ambivalent characteristic of their overall treatment of colonization and slavery. On the one hand, resistance and defiance did not exist because to acknowledge them was to acknowledge the humanity of the enslaved. On the other hand, because resistance occurred, it was dealt with quite severely, within or around the plantations.” Trouillot, Michel-Rolph, Silencing the Past: Power and the Production of History (Boston, MA: Beacon, 1995) 83 Google Scholar.
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22 Ibid., 280.
23 Paton, “Witchcraft, Poison, Law, and Atlantic—Slavery,” 237.
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