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Calculation and Morality - The Costs of Slavery and the Value of Emancipation in the French Antilles (Hardcover)
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Calculation and Morality - The Costs of Slavery and the Value of Emancipation in the French Antilles (Hardcover)
Series: Oxford Studies in History of Economics
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Debates about whether to maintain or abolish slavery revolved
around two key values: the morality of enslaving other human beings
and the economic benefits and costs of slavery as compared to free
labor. Various and conflicting arguments were presented by
abolitionists, colonists, and administrators in slave-holding
societies, all of whom used calculations about the relative cost
and productivity of slavery to defend their own point of view in an
impassioned debate. In Calculation and Morality, Caroline
Oudin-Bastide and Philippe Steiner consider how economic
calculations, estimations, and arguments informed the long debate
over French slavery between 1771 and 1848. They show how
calculation was introduced into moral debate and became a critical
social object in regard both to its consistency and its manifest
effects. To do so they trace a process in which phenomena were
classified into groups, becoming a category, and then how metrics
and calculations were used to analyze the possible effects of
emancipating slaves in French colonies. Abolitionists sought to
demonstrate that it was in the interest of slaveowners and/or the
entire nation to employ free labour in the colonies, and to show
the irrationality of the colonial and metropolitan defenders of
servitude; their aim was to enlighten various parties as to their
real interest, and how that real interest coincided with justice.
In turn, colonists accused those opposed to slavery of being
blinded by their own philanthropic principles and insisted on the
rationality of the slave system as the only means of meeting the
interests of everyone, including slaves, at least in the short and
medium term. Oudin-Bastide and Steiner closely examine the
positions and reasoning of such influential French thinkers as
Pierre Samuel Du Pont de Nemours, Anne Robert Jacques Turgot,
Antoine Nicolas de Condorcet, Simonde de Sismondi, Jean Baptiste
Say, and Alexis de Tocqueville. In doing so they shed light on the
interaction of moral precepts and econonomic calculations in a
trenchant study in the history of ideas.
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