Herman Bennett
Professor, Ph.D. Program
in History
Herman
Bennett is a renowned scholar on the history of the
African diaspora, with a particular focus on Latin
American history. Through his work, he has called for
scholars to broaden the critical inquiry of race and
ethnicity in the colonial world. He has written extensively
on the presence of African slaves and freedmen in Mexican
society during the colonial period and on the consequent
interaction between Native Americans, Europeans, and
Africans in colonial Mexico. His books include Colonial
Blackness: A History of Afro-Mexico (Indiana University
Press, 2009) and Africans in Colonial
Mexico: Absolutism, Christianity and Afro-Creole Consciousness,
1570–1640 (Indiana University Press, 2003), in which he offers
a social historical examination of free Afro-Mexican
kinship practices in the mature and late-colonial periods.
Bennett has received fellowships from the Institute
for Advanced Study at Princeton, the Mellon Foundation,
the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the
American Council of Learned Societies. He has lectured
widely in Europe and the Americas, and comes to the
Graduate Center from Rutgers University after starting
his scholarly career at Johns Hopkins University. Bennett
holds a Ph.D. in Latin American history from Duke University
where he was a Mellon Scholar of the Humanities.
Photo: Keith Yazmir |