I am a cultural and social historian of Africa whose research focuses on the relationship between religion/ritual and politics during the eras of the slave trade and colonial rule. I am particularly interested in continuity and change in the historical construction of gender and ethnicity and in how migrations on the continent of Africa and throughout the African diaspora influence the use of cultural productions to shape social and political relations and control material resources. My recent article and book manuscript illustrate my innovative use of oral and other ethnographic evidence alongside missionary sources to understand precolonial Nigeria. My chapter published an edited volume and another chapter awaiting review by a university press demonstrate my use of historical images and manumission records of African and African Diasporic pearl divers to understand the development of the African Diaspora in the Gulf region. Two short videos offer an introduction to the ways in which women participate in a Yoruba ancestral masquerade practice and organization known as Egungun, a key factor in my research in Nigeria.