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1- Séminaire: “Captifs de case (House Slaves) in a West African Urban Slaving Society. Questions of Status and Role in Eighteenth-Century Saint-Louis du Senegal” Mardi 16 Mars 2010 Ibrahima Thioub, Professeur invité à University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 2-Séminaire : “To cut the bonds of slavery/ Couper la corde de l’esclavage/ Dok bumu jam. Slavery and the trade in captives in Senegambia in the 18th and 19th centuries” Mardi 30 Mars 2010 University of Michigan, Ann Arbor : 1-Institute for the Humanities 2-Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies 3-African Studies Center et le Law in Slavery and Freedom Project Programme : Osterman Conference Room, UM Institute for the Humanities, 202 South Thayer Street. 9:30-12:00. Freedom and Captivity. Rudolph Ware : The Book in Chains: The Revolution of Fuuta Toro and the Problem of Slavery Ibrahima Thioub :‘Captifs de case’: Status and Role in Eighteenth-Century Saint-Louis du Sénégal Rebecca Scott and Jean-Michel Hébrard : From Senegambia to Saint-Domingue: Rosalie of the Poulard Nation Discussants : Mamadou Diouf (Columbia University), Mara Leichtman (MSU), other invited guests, students, audience 2:30PM - 5 PM. Getting the documents to speak. Mamadou Diouf : Freedom papers drawn up for slaveholders in Saint-Louis du Sénégal Ibrahima Thioub : An appeal for freedom addressed to the French colonial authorities Rudolph Ware : African Abolition: The Almamy of Fuuta Toro in Thomas Clarkson's Letters on the Slave Trade, 1787-1791 Jean Hébrard : 'It's time to go to Galam!': The role of the French in the organization of the slave trade on the Senegal River Comment : Judith Irvine (Anthropology, UM), other invited guests, students, and audience |



