Between 1730 and 1750, powerful healer and vodun priest Domingos
Alvares traversed the colonial Atlantic world like few Africans of
his time--from Africa to South America to Europe--addressing the
profound alienation of warfare, capitalism, and the African slave
trade through the language of health and healing. In
Domingos
Alvares, African Healing, and the Intellectual History of the
Atlantic World, James H. Sweet finds dramatic means for
unfolding a history of the eighteenth-century Atlantic world in
which healing, religion, kinship, and political subversion were
intimately connected.