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Essays draw on quantitative and qualitative evidence to cast new
light on slavery and the transatlantic slave trade as well as on
the origins and development of the African diaspora. Drawing on new
quantitative and qualitative evidence, this study reexamines the
rise, transformation, and slow demise of slavery and the slave
trade in the Atlantic world. The twelve essays here reveal the
legacies and consequences of abolition and chronicle the first
formative global human rights movement. They also cast new light on
the origins and development of the African diaspora created by the
transatlantic slave trade. Engagingly written and attuned to
twenty-first century as well as historical problems and debates,
this book will appeal to specialists interested in cultural,
economic, and political analysis of the slave trade as well as to
nonspecialists seeking to understand anew how transatlantic slavery
forever changed Europe, the Americas, and Africa. Philip Misevich
is assistant professor of history at St. John's University, and
Kristin Mann is professor of history at Emory University.
For over four hundred years, thousands of African men and women
were taken from their homeland and transported across the world to
be sold into slavery. The history of this startling and horrific
period is perennially important, and recent scholarship has sought
to uncover the experiences of the slaves themselves in order to
uncover the voices of its many victims. "Slavery and Africa in the
Caribbean" analyses the written sources which have survived,
demonstrating how many Africans coped by adopting a flexible
identity in order to negotiate the cultural differences in African,
European and Islamic systems of slavery. An important work based on
Jamaican and African archival sources, this book will appeal to
students and scholars who are interested in slavery, gender,
identity, religion, colonialism and the African diaspora.
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