Combining archaeological and historical methods, Gabino La Rosa
Corzo provides the most detailed and accurate available account of
the runaway slave settlements (
palenques) that formed in the
inaccessible mountain chains of eastern Cuba from 1737 to 1850,
decades before the end of slavery on the island. The traces that
remain of these communities provide important clues to historical
processes such as slave resistance and emancipation, anticolonial
insurgency, and the emergence of a free peasantry. Some of the
communities developed into thriving towns that still exist
today.
La Rosa challenges the claims of previous scholars and demonstrates
how romanticized the communities have become in historical memory.
In part by using detailed maps drawn on site, La Rosa shows that
palenques were smaller and fewer in number than previously
thought and they contained mostly local, rather than long-distance,
fugitives. In addition, the residents were less aggressive and
violent than myth holds, often preferring to flee rather than fight
a system of oppression that was even more effective and organized
than generally supposed. La Rosa's study illuminates many social
and economic issues related to the African diaspora in the
Caribbean, with particular focus on slavery, resistance, and
independence. This translation makes the book available in English
for the first time.