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Books > Social sciences > Politics & government > Political control & freedoms > Slavery & emancipation
This book investigates the Guinea Company and its members, aiming
to understand the genealogy of several major changes taking place
in the English Atlantic and in the Anglo-Africa trade in the
seventeenth century and beyond. Little attention has been paid to
the companies that preceded the Royal African Company, launched in
1672, and by presenting the Guinea Company - the earliest of
England's chartered Africa companies - and its relationship with
the influential men who became its members, this book questions the
inevitability of the Atlantic reality of the later seventeenth and
eighteenth centuries. Through its members, the Guinea Company
emerged as a purpose-built structure with the ability to weather a
volatile trade undergoing fundamental change.
Slavery in the Black Sea Region, c.900-1900 explores the Black Sea
region as an encounter zone of cultures, legal regimes, religions,
and enslavement practices. The topics discussed in the chapters
include Byzantine slavery, late medieval slave trade patterns,
slavery in Christian societies, Tatar and cossack raids, the
position of Circassians in the slave trade, and comparisons with
the Mediterranean and the Atlantic. This volume aims to stimulate a
broader discussion on the patterns of unfreedom in the Black Sea
area and to draw attention to the importance of this region in the
broader debates on global slavery. Contributors are: Viorel Achim,
Michel Balard, Hannah Barker, Andrzej Gliwa, Colin Heywood, Sergei
Pavlovich Karpov, Mikhail Kizilov, Dariusz Kolodziejczyk, Maryna
Kravets, Natalia Krolikowska-Jedlinska, Sandra Origone, Victor
Ostapchuk, Daphne Penna, Felicia Rosu, and Ehud R. Toledano.
The Revolt of African Slaves in Iraq in the III/IX Century is the
only full-length study on the revolt o f the Zanj. Scholars of
slavery, the African diaspora and th e Middle East have lauded
Popovic''s work. '
This book is an examination of the island of St Helena's
involvement in slave trade abolition. After the establishment of a
British Vice-Admiralty court there in 1840, this tiny and remote
South Atlantic colony became the hub of naval activity in the
region. It served as a base for the Royal Navy's West Africa
Squadron, and as such became the principal receiving depot for
intercepted slave ships and their human cargo. During the middle
decades of the nineteenth century over 25,000 'recaptive' or
'liberated' Africans were landed at the island. Here, in embryonic
refugee camps, these former slaves lived and died, genuine freedom
still a distant prospect. This book provides an account and
evaluation of this episode. It begins by charting the political
contexts which drew St Helena into the fray of abolition, and
considers how its involvement, at times, came to occupy those at
the highest levels of British politics. In the main, however, it
focuses on St Helena itself, and examines how matters played out on
the ground. The study utilises documentary sources (many previously
untouched) which tell the stories of those whose lives became bound
up in the compass of anti-slavery, far from London and long after
the Abolition Act of 1807. It puts the Black experience at the
foreground, aiming to bring a voice to a forgotten people, many of
whom died in limbo, in a place that was physically and conceptually
between freedom and slavery.
Fathers, Daughters, and Slaves brings to life the unique
contribution by French women during the early nineteenth century, a
key period in the history of colonialism and slavery. The book
enriches our understanding of French and Atlantic history in the
revolutionary and postrevolutionary years when Haiti was menaced
with the re-establishment of slavery and when class, race, and
gender identities were being renegotiated. It offers in-depth
readings of works by Germaine de Stael, Claire de Duras, and
Marceline Desbordes-Valmore. In addition to these now canonical
French authors, it calls attention to the lives and works of two
lesser-known but important figures-Charlotte Dard and Sophie Doin.
Approaching these five women through the prism of paternal
authority, Fathers, Daughters, and Slaves explores the empathy that
daughters show toward blacks as well as their resistance against
the oppression exercised by male colonists and other authority
figures. The works by these French women antislavery writers bear
significant similarities, which the book explores, with twentieth
and twenty-first century Francophone texts. These women's
contributions allow us to move beyond the traditional boundaries of
exclusively male accounts by missionaries, explorers,
functionaries, and military or political figures. They remind us of
the imperative for ever-renewed gender research in the colonial
archive and the need to expand conceptions of French women's
writing in the nineteenth century as being a small minority corpus.
Fathers, Daughters, and Slaves contributes to an understanding of
colonial fiction, Caribbean writing, romanticism, and feminism. It
undercuts neat distinctions between the cultures of France and its
colonies and between nineteenth and twentieth-century Francophone
writing."
Americans wrote fiercely during the Civil War. War surprised,
devastated, and opened up imagination, taking hold of Americans'
words as well as their homes and families. The personal
diary-wildly ragged yet rooted in day following day-was one place
Americans wrote their war. Diaries, then, have become one of the
best-known, most-used sources for exploring the life of the mind in
a war-torn place and time. Delving into several familiar wartime
diaries kept by women of the southern slave-owning class, Steven
Stowe recaptures their motivations to keep the days close even as
war tore apart the brutal system of slavery that had benefited
them. Whether the diarists recorded thoughts about themselves,
their opinions about men, or their observations about slavery,
race, and warfare, Stowe shows how these women, by writing the
immediate moment, found meaning in a changing world. In studying
the inner lives of these unsympathetic characters, Stowe also
explores the importance-and the limits-of historical empathy as a
condition for knowing the past, demonstrating how these plain,
first-draft texts can offer new ways to make sense of the world in
which these Confederate women lived.
Recent years have seen a growing body of literature dedicated to
memories of slavery in the Anglophone world, yet little has been
done to approach this subject from Francophone perspectives. This
collection responds to the urgent need to contribute to current
research on slavery and memory studies by focusing specifically on
the Francophone world. Featuring the scholarship of leading
academics in France, Britain, the United States and Canada, the
collection reflects upon contemporary commemorative practices that
relate to the history of slavery and the slave trade, and questions
how they function in relationship to other, less memorialized
histories of exploitation, such as indentured and forced labour.
The volume is set against the context of France's growing body of
memory legislation, as well as its close cultural and political
connections to its former empire, all of which make it an
influential player in how slavery continues to be memorialized and
conceptualized in the public sphere. Contributors retrace and
redraw the narrative map of slavery and its legacies in the
Francophone world through a comparative understanding of how these
different, but interconnected forms of labour exploitation have
been remembered and/or forgotten from European, West African,
Indian Ocean and Caribbean perspectives.
Slavery and Bonded Labor in Asia, 1250-1900 is the first collection
of studies to focus on slavery and related forms of labor
throughout Asia. The 15 chapters by an international group of
scholars assess the current state of Asian slavery studies, discuss
new research on slave systems in Asia, identify avenues for future
research, and explore new approaches to reconstructing the history
of slavery and bonded labor in Asia and, by extension, elsewhere in
the globe. Individual chapters examine slavery, slave trading,
abolition, and bonded labor in places as diverse as Ceylon, China,
India, Korea, the Mongol Empire, the Philippines, the Sulu
Archipelago, and Timor in local, regional, pan-regional, and
comparative contexts. Contributors are: Richard B. Allen, Michael
D. Bennett, Claude Chevaleyre, Jeff Fynn-Paul, Hans Hagerdal,
Shawna Herzog, Jessica Hinchy, Kumari Jayawardena, Rachel Kurian,
Bonny Ling, Christopher Lovins, Stephanie Mawson, Anthony Reid,
James Francis Warren, Don J. Wyatt, Harriet T. Zurndorfer.
In this book, Sharada Balachandran Orihuela examines property
ownership and its connections to citizenship, race and slavery, and
piracy as seen through the lens of eighteenth- and
nineteenth-century American literature. Balachandran Orihuela
defines piracy expansively, from the familiar concept of nautical
pirates and robbery in international waters to post-revolutionary
counterfeiting, transnational slave escape, and the illegal trade
of cotton across the Americas during the Civil War. Weaving
together close readings of American, Chicano, and African American
literature with political theory, the author shows that piracy,
when represented through literature, has imagined more inclusive
and democratic communities than were then possible in reality. The
author shows that these subjects are not taking part in unlawful
acts only for economic gain. Rather, Balachandran Orihuela argues
that piracy might, surprisingly, have served as a public good,
representing a form of transnational belonging that transcends
membership in any one nation-state while also functioning as a
surrogate to citizenship through the ownership of property. These
transnational and transactional forms of social and economic life
allow for a better understanding the foundational importance of
property ownership and its role in the creation of citizenship.
'There are no two things in the world more different from each
other than East-Indian and West Indian-slavery' (Robert Inglis,
House of Commons Debate, 1833). In Slavery, Abolitionism and Empire
in India, 1772-1843, Andrea Major asks why, at a time when East
India Company expansion in India, British abolitionism and the
missionary movement were all at their height, was the existence of
slavery in India so often ignored, denied or excused? By exploring
Britain's ambivalent relationship with both real and imagined
slaveries in India, and the official, evangelical and popular
discourses which surrounded them, she seeks to uncover the various
political, economic and ideological agendas that allowed East
Indian slavery to be represented as qualitatively different from
its trans-Atlantic counterpart. In doing so, she uncovers tensions
in the relationship between colonial policy and the so-called
'civilising mission', elucidating the intricate interactions
between humanitarian movements, colonial ideologies and imperial
imperatives in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century.
The work draws on a range of sources from Britain and India to
provide a trans-national perspective on this little known facet of
the story of slavery and abolition in the British Empire,
uncovering the complex ways in which Indian slavery was
encountered, discussed, utilised, rationalised, and reconciled with
the economic, political and moral imperatives of an empire whose
focus was shifting to the East.
In The Portuguese Slave Trade in Early Modern Japan: Merchants,
Jesuits and Japanese, Chinese, and Korean Slaves, Lucio de Sousa
offers a study on the system of traffic of Japanese, Chinese, and
Korean slaves from Japan, using the Portuguese mercantile networks;
reconstructs the Japanese communities in the Habsburg Empire; and
analyses the impact of the Japanese slave trade on the Iberian
legislation produced in the 16th and first half of the 17th
centuries.
What would it mean to ""get over slavery""? Is such a thing
possible? Is it even desirable? Should we perceive the psychic hold
of slavery as a set of mental manacles that hold us back from
imagining a postracist America? Or could the psychic hold of
slavery be understood as a tool, helping us get a grip on the
systemic racial inequalities and restricted liberties that persist
in the present day? Featuring original essays from an array of
established and emerging scholars in the interdisciplinary field of
African American studies, The Psychic Hold of Slavery offers a
nuanced dialogue upon these questions. With a painful awareness
that our understanding of the past informs our understanding of the
present - and vice versa - the contributors place slavery's
historical legacies in conversation with twenty-first-century
manifestations of antiblack violence, dehumanization, and social
death. Through an exploration of film, drama, fiction, performance
art, graphic novels, and philosophical discourse, this volume
considers how artists grapple with questions of representation, as
they ask whether slavery can ever be accurately depicted, trace the
scars that slavery has left on a traumatized body politic, or
debate how to best convey that black lives matter. The Psychic Hold
of Slavery thus raises provocative questions about how we behold
the historically distinct event of African diasporic enslavement
and how we might hold off the transhistorical force of antiblack
domination.
In this book Jukka Korpela offers an analysis of the trade in
kidnapped Finns and Karelians into slavery in Eastern Europe. Blond
slaves from the north of Europe were rare luxury items in Black Sea
and Caspian markets, and the high prices they commanded stimulated
and sustained a long-distance trade based on kidnapping in special
robbery missions and war expeditions. Captives were sold into the
Volga slave trade and transported through market webs further
south. This business differed and was separate from the large-scale
raids carried out on Crimeans for enslavement in Eastern Europe, or
the mass kidnappings characteristic of Mediterranean slavery. The
trade in Finns and Karelians provides new perspectives on the
formation of the Russian state as well as the economic networks of
official and unofficial markets in Eastern Europe.
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