ABSTRACT

This interdisciplinary book explores human rights in the Americas from multiple perspectives and fields. Taking 1492 as a point of departure, the text explores Eurocentric historiographies of human rights and offer a more complete understanding of the genealogy of the human rights discourse and its many manifestations in the Americas.

The essays use a variety of approaches to reveal the larger contexts from which they emerge, providing a cross-sectional view of subjects, countries, methodologies and foci explicitly dedicated toward understanding historical factors and circumstances that have shaped human rights nationally and internationally within the Americas. The chapters explore diverse cultural, philosophical, political and literary expressions where human rights discourses circulate across the continent taking into consideration issues such as race, class, gender, genealogy and nationality. While acknowledging the ongoing centrality of the nation, the volume promotes a shift in the study of the Americas as a dynamic transnational space of conflict, domination, resistance, negotiation, complicity, accommodation, dialogue, and solidarity where individuals, nations, peoples, institutions, and intellectual and political movements share struggles, experiences, and imaginaries.

It will be of interest to all scholars and students of InterAmerican studies and those from all disciplines interested in Human Rights.

chapter |28 pages

Introduction

Human rights in the Americas

part I|50 pages

Early origins of human rights

chapter 301|14 pages

Human rights in the Americas

A stony path

chapter 2|16 pages

Constructing rights and empires in the early Americas

The parallel reception histories of Carlos de Sigüenza y Góngora and Cotton Mather

part II|36 pages

Human rights in Central America and the Caribbean

part III|46 pages

Human rights and gender

chapter 1166|15 pages

Black women writers in the Americas

The struggle for human rights in the context of coloniality

part IV|48 pages

Human Rights: Mexican Indigenous groups and Mexican Americans groups

part V|54 pages

Human rights: Afro-Brazilians and Afro-Latinas/os

chapter 21012|12 pages

Brazilian quilombos

Castaínho and its struggle for human rights

chapter 14|20 pages

“We got Latin soul!”

Transbarrio dialogs and Afro-Latin identity formation in New York's Puerto Rican community during the age of Black Power (1966–1972)

part VI|32 pages

Human right, animals rights, and posthuman rights

chapter 26415|18 pages

From racism to speciesism

The question of freedom of the other in the works of J. M. Coetzee and Jure Detela

chapter 16|12 pages

To be or not to be human

The plasticity of posthuman rights