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GLC@Lunch: “Freedom on Three Coasts: Slavery, Law, and Belonging in the South Atlantic World”

Nov
21
-
Rosenkranz Hall
115 Prospect Street, New Haven CT, 06511
Room 241

PLEASE NOTE DATE CHANGE: GLC@Lunch with John Marquez, Friday, November 21, 2025

Hybrid event:

In person | Yale University Rosenkranz Hall, Room 241, 115 Prospect Street, New Haven 06511

*Note: In-person seating is limited and available on a first-come, first-served basis.

Online | Zoom *Use registration link above.

John Marquez (GLC Research Affiliate; Assistant Professor of History, University of California, Riverside)

What did it mean to be free in a world so deeply marked by unfreedom? In this talk, I reframe the history of freedom in the South Atlantic world within the broader aspirations of Africans and their descendants to claim belonging—in families, in communities, and in imperial political communities. I focus on an enslaved woman in Brazil named Marcelina Dias Silvestre who petitioned the Portuguese crown at the turn of the eighteenth century for her manumission. Through an analysis of the arguments she and others made in their royal appeals, I argue that enslaved people articulated moral critiques of enslavement that promoted manumission as a form of justice. In doing so, petitioners like Marcelina Dias Silvestre not only contested the very meanings of slavery itself but also claimed positions as insiders of the imperial political community.