Cuarto Congreso de la Cultura Negra de las Américas (1989-1991). Condicionantes históricos y tensiones epistémicas de un congreso fallido

Objective/Context: The paper aims to analyze the final period of the project of the Fourth Congress of Black Culture in the Americas and the process by which historical events on both sides of the Atlantic—such as the fifth centenary of the “discovery” of America, claims against the apartheid, the o...

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Main Author: Silvia Valero
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidad de los Andes 2021-07-01
Series:Historia Crítica
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.uniandes.edu.co/doi/full/10.7440/histcrit81.2021.05
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spelling doaj-e2c2fe755ae0440fb576a34a3fab147b2021-07-23T16:20:57ZspaUniversidad de los Andes Historia Crítica0121-16171900-61522021-07-01819511710.7440/histcrit81.2021.05Cuarto Congreso de la Cultura Negra de las Américas (1989-1991). Condicionantes históricos y tensiones epistémicas de un congreso fallidoSilvia Valero0Universidad de Cartagena, ColombiaObjective/Context: The paper aims to analyze the final period of the project of the Fourth Congress of Black Culture in the Americas and the process by which historical events on both sides of the Atlantic—such as the fifth centenary of the “discovery” of America, claims against the apartheid, the opening of the European Economic Community, and the multicultural turn of Latin America—constituted their conditions of possibility at the same time of limiting their realization. Methodology: With intellectual history as a methodological tool for microhistory, the article examines the power game and the tensions and contradictions that this entailed between—and within—funding agencies and black intellectuals when defining the philosophical and historical foundations of what the congress should be. Originality: The article makes a contribution in analytical terms, through its transnational approach, as well as a cross-analysis of primary sources unexplored by researchers. Conclusions: Social actors—agencies, institutions, individuals as political actors—adopted different logics of participation that were not as coherent and homogeneous as expected. Non-governmental organizations, such as the UNESCO and the Mitterrand Foundation, played a fundamental role in what was envisioned for the realization of the event, as well as in its cancellation.https://revistas.uniandes.edu.co/doi/full/10.7440/histcrit81.2021.05abdias do nascimentoblack intellectualsfourth congressfunding agenciesmanuel zapata olivella
collection DOAJ
language Spanish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Silvia Valero
spellingShingle Silvia Valero
Cuarto Congreso de la Cultura Negra de las Américas (1989-1991). Condicionantes históricos y tensiones epistémicas de un congreso fallido
Historia Crítica
abdias do nascimento
black intellectuals
fourth congress
funding agencies
manuel zapata olivella
author_facet Silvia Valero
author_sort Silvia Valero
title Cuarto Congreso de la Cultura Negra de las Américas (1989-1991). Condicionantes históricos y tensiones epistémicas de un congreso fallido
title_short Cuarto Congreso de la Cultura Negra de las Américas (1989-1991). Condicionantes históricos y tensiones epistémicas de un congreso fallido
title_full Cuarto Congreso de la Cultura Negra de las Américas (1989-1991). Condicionantes históricos y tensiones epistémicas de un congreso fallido
title_fullStr Cuarto Congreso de la Cultura Negra de las Américas (1989-1991). Condicionantes históricos y tensiones epistémicas de un congreso fallido
title_full_unstemmed Cuarto Congreso de la Cultura Negra de las Américas (1989-1991). Condicionantes históricos y tensiones epistémicas de un congreso fallido
title_sort cuarto congreso de la cultura negra de las américas (1989-1991). condicionantes históricos y tensiones epistémicas de un congreso fallido
publisher Universidad de los Andes
series Historia Crítica
issn 0121-1617
1900-6152
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Objective/Context: The paper aims to analyze the final period of the project of the Fourth Congress of Black Culture in the Americas and the process by which historical events on both sides of the Atlantic—such as the fifth centenary of the “discovery” of America, claims against the apartheid, the opening of the European Economic Community, and the multicultural turn of Latin America—constituted their conditions of possibility at the same time of limiting their realization. Methodology: With intellectual history as a methodological tool for microhistory, the article examines the power game and the tensions and contradictions that this entailed between—and within—funding agencies and black intellectuals when defining the philosophical and historical foundations of what the congress should be. Originality: The article makes a contribution in analytical terms, through its transnational approach, as well as a cross-analysis of primary sources unexplored by researchers. Conclusions: Social actors—agencies, institutions, individuals as political actors—adopted different logics of participation that were not as coherent and homogeneous as expected. Non-governmental organizations, such as the UNESCO and the Mitterrand Foundation, played a fundamental role in what was envisioned for the realization of the event, as well as in its cancellation.
topic abdias do nascimento
black intellectuals
fourth congress
funding agencies
manuel zapata olivella
url https://revistas.uniandes.edu.co/doi/full/10.7440/histcrit81.2021.05
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