Isis Barra Costa is assistant professor of contemporary Brazilian cultural and literary studies at the Ohio State University.
Imagining the Past, Remembering the Future weaves insights from multiple disciplines to illuminate the African cultural foundations of the Americas, especially Brazil. Beautiful and necessary, it calls for slow, attentive reading—guiding us toward the subtle dimensions of Afro-diasporic knowledge embedded in the textures of everyday sound, image, and gesture. -- Zeca Ligiéro, artist and dean of the Center for Letters and Arts, Federal University of the State of Rio de Janeiro Imagining the Past, Remembering the Future offers a rich and wide-ranging analysis about Afro-Atlantic epistemologies, narration, and performance in Brazil—from Carnaval parades to spirit-led novels. Barra Costa writes with lyrical grace, using vivid metaphors and poetic language to explore their recreation and transformation across time, from the transatlantic slave trade to digital networks today. -- Christopher J. Dunn, author of <i>Contracultura: Alternative Arts and Social Transformation in Authoritarian Brazil</i> By studying the Kongo-Angola-Yoruba-Ewe-Brazilian archive with the same rigor usually devoted to the European archive, Barra Costa brilliantly shows how the most diverse African matrices do not dissolve into a single national culture and how they illuminate a world still haunted by colonialism. -- Pedro Meira Monteiro, Arthur W. Marks ’19 Professor of Spanish and Portuguese, Princeton University