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Lecture: “Bahia and the Transnational Invention of Afro-Brazilian Studies”

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Lecture: “Bahia and the Transnational Invention of Afro-Brazilian Studies”

Uptown Campus
Jones Hall
Greenleaf Conference Room

Featuring Livio Sansone, Professor of Anthropology, Federal University of Bahia

Livio Sansone (Palermo, Italy, 1956) got his PhD from the University of Amsterdam and has been living in Brazil since 1992, where he is Professor of Anthropology at the Federal University of Bahia (UFBA). Prof. Sansone is the founder and director of the Factory of Ideas Program – an advanced international course in ethnic and African studies – and coordinates the Digital Museum of African and Afro-Brazilian Heritage. He has published widely in Portuguese, English, Italian, Spanish, and Dutch. His books include Blackness Without Ethnicity. Creating Race in Brazil, La Galassia Lombroso, l’ Africa e l’ America Latina, and Field Station Bahia. Brazil in the work of Lorenzo Dow Turner E. Franklin Frazier, Frances and Melville Herskovits – 1935-1967. Over the last years, his research has been on the circulation of ideas of race and emancipation between Southern Europe, Africa and Latin America, the transnational making of Afro-Brazilian anthropology in the 1940s and the cosmopolitan nationalism of Mozambican independence leader Eduardo Mondlane.

Stone Center for Latin American StudiesSchool of Liberal ArtsSpanish and Portuguese Department