Maroon Queen, Mother of the Nation, & ‘Science Woman’: Using the Physical, Social and Metaphysical Sciences to Interrogate the History of Queen Nanny of the Jamaican Maroons

Activity Type: 
Lecture Series / Brown Bag
Presenter: 
Dr. Harcourt Fuller
Date: 
Friday, March 22, 2019 - 14:00 to 16:00
Event Status: 
As Scheduled
Location: 
4130 Posvar Hall
Contact Person: 
Department of Africana Studies

Dr. Harcourt Fuller is an Associate Professor at Georgia State University. His lecture is titled: Maroon Queen, Mother of the Nation, & “Science Woman”: Using the Physical, Social and Metaphysical Sciences to Interrogate the History of Queen Nanny of the Jamaican Maroons. In his lecture, Dr. Fuller will explore the history of resistance against slavery in the Caribbean. In addition, he will also discuss his research methods for investigating the ethnogenesis and lived experiences of the Jamaican Maroons, including that of the 18th century leader, Queen Nanny of the Jamaican Maroons.

The second part of his lecture will focus on the Maroon notion of Queen Nanny as “science woman,” “metaphysical scientist,” or “traditional environmental scientist,” as opposed to the negative, and misconstrued stereotypes promulgated by British planter-historians and colonial officials. He seeks to not only examine how scholars can use scientific methodologies in historical inquiry, but also to reevaluate the questions of what science and technology are, and how they have been used in the context of Maroon nations that survived and lived in their own worlds and on the periphery of European slave societies in the Americas.

Dr. Fuller is a Fulbright Global Scholar and Associate Professor of History at Georgia State University. Please join us for this lecture!

UCIS Unit: 
Center for African Studies
Global Studies Center
Other Pitt Sponsors: 
Center for Bioethics and Health Law
Center for Health Equity
Department of Human Genetics
Department of Sociology
Kenneth P. Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences
Urban Studies Program
World History Center
Year of Pitt Global