Richard Price
“This fascinating study of the idea of Africa in Salvador, Bahia, draws on a series of encounters with diversely situated people – African-born ‘tour guides’ who serve up what African American and other ‘roots’ visitors yearn for in this city known as Black Rome; white-clad Bahianas who sell the quintessential ‘African’ food, acarajé, and who turn out to be, in large majority, non-practitioners of Candomblé; academics, who have played such an essential role in the creation of Yoruba purity in the cult centers; and the people of the sertão, whose ideas of Blackness and Africa are so different from those in the city. Dawson effectively analyzes ‘Africa’ and ‘Blackness,’ emphasizing the highly contingent qualities of these powerful cultural constructs.”
Stephen Selka
“In Light of Africa is an ambitious exploration of the special place that Bahia holds in the history of the anthropology of the African diaspora as well as the prominent place that Africa holds in the cultural construction of Bahia. Rich in ethnographic materials, this book has much to offer to a wide range of readers in the fields of anthropology, Latin American studies, and Black studies.”