In Caribbean Espiritismo, La Madama is not a stereotype, a costume, or a fantasy figure. She is a spiritual presence rooted in history. She represents the memory of African-descended women who endured plantation life, preserved herbal knowledge, guided families, and carried spiritual authority inside the home when the world outside offered none.
This book offers a grounded and historically aware exploration of La Madama as she is understood within traditional Espiritismo. It moves beyond caricature and theatrical imagery to examine her role as healer, cleaner, protector, disciplinarian, and matriarch within the spiritual court. Readers will discover how she works through domestic space, through the broom, the kitchen, the altar, and the careful ordering of a home.
In Caribbean Espiritismo, La Madama is not a stereotype, a costume, or a fantasy figure. She is a spiritual presence rooted in history. She represents the memory of African-descended women who endured plantation life, preserved herbal knowledge, guided families, and carried spiritual authority inside the home when the world outside offered none.
This book offers a grounded and historically aware exploration of La Madama as she is understood within traditional Espiritismo. It moves beyond caricature and theatrical imagery to examine her role as healer, cleaner, protector, disciplinarian, and matriarch within the spiritual court. Readers will discover how she works through domestic space, through the broom, the kitchen, the altar, and the careful ordering of a home.