Associate Professor of African and Atlantic History, University of Bristol
PhD, 2001, University of Birmingham (Thesis title: ‘Inculturation Problematic: Historical, Sacrificial and Literary Traditions from Guinea-Bissau and Christian Theology’)
MPhil, 1997, University of Birmingham (Thesis title: Historical, Sacrificial and Literary Traditions and Postcolonial Theory)
Bachelor of Divinity (BD), 1993, University of London
José Lingna Nafafé is an associate professor of African and Atlantic history, Department of Hispanic, Portuguese and Latin American Studies, University of Bristol, and was the first director of the MA in Black humanities. His academic interests embrace inter-related areas linked by the overarching themes of: the Black Atlantic abolitionist movement in the 17th century; the Lusophone Atlantic African diaspora; wage-labour, 1792-1850; race, religion and ethnicity; Luso-African migrants; ‘Europe in Africa’ and ‘Africa in Europe’; and the postcolonial theory. His recent publications include the award-winning book, Lourenço da Silva Mendonça and the Black Atlantic Abolitionist Movement in the 17th Century, Cambridge University Press, 2022. He is currently writing a third monograph on: Beyond Wilberforce’s Experiment in Abolitionism: Yellow Fever Epidemic, Unfree Labour and the Market, 1792-1870.