Congo Square : African roots in New Orleans

cover image

Where to find it

Davis Library (5th floor)

Call Number
F379.N57 C663 2011
Status
Checked Out (Due 8/14/2024)

Stone Center Library

Call Number
F379.N57 C663 2011 c. 2
Status
Checked Out (Due 7/8/2024)

Authors, etc.

Names:

Summary

Congo Square: African Roots in New Orleans comprises the first comprehensive study of one of the New World's most sacred sites of African American memory and community. Beginning in the eighteenth century, enslaved Africans and free people of color gathered in Congo Square on Sunday afternoons discontinuously for well over one hundred years. This book presents accounts and descriptions of the songs, dances, musical instruments, religious beliefs, and marketing traditions that typified those gatherings.

Written in a language accessible to the general public and students on the undergraduate as well as secondary level, this book includes an innovative timeline, maps, graphic images, extensive endnotes, and bibliographic references. This distinguishes it as an exceptional teaching resource for Louisiana as well as African American history and culture across the curriculum.

Contents

  • Foreword p. ix J. H. Kwabena 'Nketia
  • Acknowledgements p. xiii
  • Chapter 1 Introduction p. 1
  • Chapter 2 The Legacy of the Gathering Place p. 9
  • Chapter 3 The Significance of the Gatherings p. 23
  • Chapter 4 The Gatherers p. 47
  • Chapter 5 The Musical Instruments p. 63
  • Chapter 6 The Songs p. 75
  • Chapter 7 The Dances p. 89
  • Chapter 8 The Economic Exchange p. 109
  • Chapter 9 Conclusion p. 115
  • Chapter 10 Epilogue p. 119
  • Timeline of Events Relevant to Congo Square p. 135
  • Notes p. 165
  • Selected Bibliography p. 187
  • Image Credits p. 196
  • Index p. 197

Other details