History book looks at Brazil’s longest-lasting maroon society and its influence today

The largest and longest-lasting society formed by people who escaped slavery and their descendants endured for a century in northeastern Brazil, and it continues to be a potent political symbol of Black pride today. University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign history professor Marc Hertzman wrote about the settlement and how memories of it survive in his book, “After Palmares: Diaspora, Inheritance, and the Afterlives of Zumbi.”

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