数字资源:拉丁美洲的现代奴隶制和奴隶贸易

Jorge Felipe-Gonzalez
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引用次数: 0

摘要

互联网和计算技术的扩展,在启发式、方法论和认识论上,已经改变了关于现代大西洋奴隶制和奴隶贸易的学术研究。越来越多的第一手资料和第二手资料现在可以在网上找到。档案馆、高校、图书馆、研究中心等机构将部分或全部历史馆藏和档案资料数字化,通过多种形式的数字门户向社会公开。用户可以立即访问、分析、搜索、共享、传输、可视化和与大量关于奴隶制和奴隶贸易的历史数据进行交互,这些数据在20世纪后期分散在档案馆和图书馆中。关于拉丁美洲历史奴隶制和奴隶贸易的数字知识库在网络上的出现越来越多,这改变了以前学术界对更广泛的人口、历史和社会问题的看法,也改变了对被奴役非洲人日常生活的看法。例如,关于奴隶贸易的数字数据库正在回答长期以来有关被带到美洲的俘虏的数量、他们的非洲登船地区或运载者的国籍的历史问题。数字资源库和数据库有助于更好地了解奴隶及其种族的非洲地理起源,这是非洲-拉丁美洲文化形成的关键组成部分。数字化的存储库,如洗礼、婚姻和葬礼档案记录,以及关于逃跑或自我解放的奴隶、种植园名单或法庭案件的数据库,正在填补学者们对奴隶制制度内部动态的理解空白,奴隶制是大约三个世纪以来大部分拉丁美洲历史的特征。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Digital Resources: Modern Slavery and the Slave Trade in Latin America
The expansion of the Internet and computing technologies has transformed, heuristically, methodologically, and epistemologically, the scholarship on modern Atlantic slavery and the slave trade. An increasing number of primary and secondary sources are now available online. Archives, universities, libraries, research centers, and other institutions have digitized partially or entirely historical collections and archival records and made them public through digital portals in a variety of formats. Users can instantly access, analyze, search, share, transfer, visualize, and interact with a vast amount of historical data on slavery and the slave trade, which, in the late 20th century, was scattered across archives and libraries. The increasing Web presence of digital repositories on Latin American historical slavery and the slave trade is changing previous scholarly perceptions about broader demographic, historical, and social issues, as well as about the everyday life of enslaved Africans. Digital databases on the slave trade, for instance, are answering long-term historiographical concerns regarding the number of captives carried to the Americas, their African embarkation regions, or the nationality of the carriers. Digital repositories and databases help to better understand the African geographical origins of the slaves and their ethnicities, a key component in the formation of the Afro-Latin American culture. Digitized repositories such as baptismal, marriage, and burial archival records and databases on runaway or self-liberated slaves, plantation lists, or court cases are filling gaps in scholars’ understanding of the internal dynamics of the institution of slavery, which characterized most of Latin American history for about three centuries.
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