Materias Fundamentales

Launch collection

Materias Fundamentales

The Founding Subjects page is the curated launch collection for NFA’s public proof of concept. It must show all 20 subjects, even when a packet or page is still moving toward final publication.

20founding subjects
10era structure
6PSWA letters
Why these subjects

A launch library for method, not celebrity

The Founding Subjects are selected to demonstrate NFA’s full method: biography, structural history, evidentiary limits, public memory, legal status, revolution, institution building, literary witness, and contemporary interpretation.

Era 2 · 1400–1650

01 · Mustafa ibn Muhammad / Estevanico

A launch subject for early Atlantic movement, forced expeditionary labor, translation, survival, and the problem of fragmentary colonial records.

Era 2 · 1400–1650

02 · Queen Nzinga

A sovereign strategist for studying diplomacy, war, gendered power, and the pressures of Atlantic imperial expansion.

Era 3 · 1650–1775

03 · Elizabeth Key Grinstead

A legal subject for examining status, inheritance, race-making, gender, baptism, and freedom litigation.

Era 3 · 1650–1775

04 · Queen Nanny

A Maroon leader for studying sovereignty, terrain, resistance, and the limits of plantation power.

Era 4 · 1775–1820

05 · Toussaint Louverture

A revolutionary strategist for analyzing emancipation, statecraft, military power, and Atlantic political crisis.

Era 4 · 1775–1820

06 · King Ghezo

A West African ruler for studying sovereignty, commerce, militarization, and the contradictions of abolition-era diplomacy.

Era 5 · 1820–1860

07 · Frederick Douglass

A writer, orator, and political actor for studying self-emancipation, print, citizenship, and public argument.

Era 5 · 1820–1860

08 · Harriet Tubman

A liberation strategist for studying mobility, networks, intelligence, war, and disciplined action under threat.

Era 7 · 1877–1930

09 · W. E. B. Du Bois

A scholar and theorist for studying data, sociology, global Black politics, and historical interpretation.

Era 7 · 1877–1930

10 · Mary McLeod Bethune

An institution builder for studying education, civic power, women’s leadership, and public administration.

Era 8 · 1930–1955

11 · Pauli Murray

A legal thinker and writer for studying civil rights, constitutional argument, gender, faith, and institutional exclusion.

Era 8/9 · 1930–1980

12 · James Baldwin

A writer and critic for studying witness, moral language, nationhood, identity, and historical evasion.

Era 8/9 · 1930–1980

13 · Toni Morrison

A novelist and editor for studying memory, narrative structure, language, canon formation, and historical imagination.

Era 10 · 1980–Present

14 · Clarence Thomas

A contemporary legal subject for studying constitutional interpretation, institutional power, ideology, and public controversy.

Palmares · 1600s–1694

15 · Zumbi dos Palmares

A Palmares subject for studying maroon sovereignty, colonial war, public memory, and contested evidence.

Palmares · 1600s–1694

16 · Dandara dos Palmares

A public-memory subject for studying gendered remembrance, evidentiary limits, and how NFA marks disputed claims.

c.1580–1621

17 · Benkos Biohó

A founder of Palenque San Basilio for studying marronage, treaty politics, and community survival.

Cuba · 1843–1844

18 · Carlota Lucumí

A rebellion subject for studying plantation violence, Afro-Cuban resistance, and archival limits.

Haitian Revolution

19 · Sanité Bélair

A revolutionary subject for studying women, war, public memory, and evidence-safe representation.

Atlantic World

20 · Olaudah Equiano

A writer and abolition subject for studying autobiography, disputed birthplace evidence, print, commerce, and testimony.

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