The loss of Britain's North American colonies sparked an intense
debate about the nature of colonization in the period 1770-1800.
Drawing on archival research into colonies in Africa and Australia,
including Sierra Leone and Botany Bay, Deirdre Coleman shows how
the growing popularity of the anti-slavery movement gave a utopian
cast to the debate about colonization. This utopianism can be seen
most clearly in Romantic attempts to found an empire without
slaves, a new world which would also encompass revolutionary
sexual, racial and labour arrangements. From Henry Smeathman and
John Clarkson in Sierra Leone to Arthur Phillip and William Dawes
in Botany Bay, Coleman analyses the impact of the discourses and
ideals underlying Romantic colonization. She argues that these
paved the way for racial strife in West Africa and the eventual
dispossession of Australia's native people.
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