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This book makes work in the field of sociolinguistics easily
accessible to working teachers and to teachers in training. It
focuses on the crucial first weeks that children spend in school,
and deals with talk as a joint production, in which teachers and
pupils are engaged from the earliest stages of the educational
process. Using a variety of research methods and observations, Mary
Willes captures the reality of what goes on in the classroom, and
describes how young children develop both linguistic and cognitive
skills in this social context. In addition, she examines classrooms
where teachers have to find ways of interacting with young speakers
of a mother tongue other than English.
After Britain's Abolition of the Slave Trade Act of 1807, a
squadron of Royal Navy vessels was sent to the West Coast of Africa
tasked with suppressing the thriving transatlantic slave trade.
Drawing on previously unpublished papers found in private
collections and various archives in the UK and abroad, this book
examines the personal and cultural experiences of the naval
officers at the frontline of Britain's anti-slavery campaign in
West Africa. It explores their unique roles in this 60-year
operation: at sea, boarding slave ships bound for the Americas and
'liberating' captive Africans; on shore, as Britain resolved to
'improve' West African societies; and in the metropolitan debates
around slavery and abolitionism in Britain. Their personal
narratives are revealing of everyday concerns of health, rewards
and strategy, to more profound questions of national honour,
cultural encounters, responsibility for the lives of others in the
most distressing of circumstances, and the true meaning of
'freedom' for formerly enslaved African peoples. British
anti-slavery efforts and imperial agendas were tightly bound in the
nineteenth century, inseparable from ideas of national identity.
This is a book about individuals tasked with extraordinary service,
military men who also worked as guardians, negotiators, and envoys
of abolition.
After Britain's Abolition of the Slave Trade Act of 1807, a
squadron of Royal Navy vessels was sent to the West Coast of Africa
tasked with suppressing the thriving transatlantic slave trade.
Drawing on previously unpublished papers found in private
collections and various archives in the UK and abroad, this book
examines the personal and cultural experiences of the naval
officers at the frontline of Britain's anti-slavery campaign in
West Africa. It explores their unique roles in this 60-year
operation: at sea, boarding slave ships bound for the Americas and
'liberating' captive Africans; on shore, as Britain resolved to
'improve' West African societies; and in the metropolitan debates
around slavery and abolitionism in Britain. Their personal
narratives are revealing of everyday concerns of health, rewards
and strategy, to more profound questions of national honour,
cultural encounters, responsibility for the lives of others in the
most distressing of circumstances, and the true meaning of
'freedom' for formerly enslaved African peoples. British
anti-slavery efforts and imperial agendas were tightly bound in the
nineteenth century, inseparable from ideas of national identity.
This is a book about individuals tasked with extraordinary service,
military men who also worked as guardians, negotiators, and envoys
of abolition.
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