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Research output: Contribution to Journal/Magazine › Journal article › peer-review
Research output: Contribution to Journal/Magazine › Journal article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Against the Grain? Alternate Geographies and the 'Countervoyage' in the Trajectories of Teresa de Jesus
AU - Patel Nascimento, Selina
PY - 2022/6/15
Y1 - 2022/6/15
N2 - This article explores the life of Teresa de Jesus, who made the rare journey from Bahia to Lisbon as a slave. Later, she became the only freed Black woman to be executed in Lisbon. Refusing the gaze of the judges who interpreted her only through stereotypes, this essay reads her sentence ‘against the grain’ to develop a biography of this remarkable woman. Invoking the image of the “countervoyage,” it articulates a rethinking of the entangled mobilities of enslaved and free(d) black women in the Portuguese empire, especially between Brazil and Portugal. As Teresa moved against the imagined current of enslaved black bodies by moving closer to the seat of imperial power, she challenged the racist, misogynistic and slavocratic ideologies that were fundamental in maintaining a stable empire. Thus, Teresa de Jesus contributed to a spatial and geographic re-mapping through various corporeal and ideological trajectories. Her biography highlights how a freed black woman sentenced to death could still lead her life with a certain agency, and illuminates how enslaved and free(d) black women could negotiate and resist the contours of spatialized imperial power.
AB - This article explores the life of Teresa de Jesus, who made the rare journey from Bahia to Lisbon as a slave. Later, she became the only freed Black woman to be executed in Lisbon. Refusing the gaze of the judges who interpreted her only through stereotypes, this essay reads her sentence ‘against the grain’ to develop a biography of this remarkable woman. Invoking the image of the “countervoyage,” it articulates a rethinking of the entangled mobilities of enslaved and free(d) black women in the Portuguese empire, especially between Brazil and Portugal. As Teresa moved against the imagined current of enslaved black bodies by moving closer to the seat of imperial power, she challenged the racist, misogynistic and slavocratic ideologies that were fundamental in maintaining a stable empire. Thus, Teresa de Jesus contributed to a spatial and geographic re-mapping through various corporeal and ideological trajectories. Her biography highlights how a freed black woman sentenced to death could still lead her life with a certain agency, and illuminates how enslaved and free(d) black women could negotiate and resist the contours of spatialized imperial power.
M3 - Journal article
VL - 16
SP - 51
EP - 85
JO - Revista de História Comparada
JF - Revista de História Comparada
IS - 1
ER -